ee ee artnet tate a: eee a rote eh San apa: Newer dae» ok ten anon eel in a = ees oe ea ot a mea -~ ah A diane Sepegthannaaan anaes o~Mew York Herald. THR RRAMINGB. 305 SABRE Ul aga + tea mane are mi eee? vv eet =o hele Bidtedanne idea of its capabilities will po abroad,! Avxotuer Murpen Phot Pritscnir-! started, twelve days before, they were in| : a ed that whichaow deters, emi-) TIONS —Miss. Anva R. Nell, of Phsindel - perfect order, and better potatoes, It is) vee oak capita! {rd compe anong phy theft billows fever, aud & lovely wid, were Never seen. We learn these} eae be yo, and) yout iady--the comfort of her parents!facta at the Custom liouse.— Bostou ws. The country wil! when known, must be proper) St. John, N. =. Mor nine WN eins, ; —— ] A deposit of the purest tyosem has, abe o'clock on Phorsday, in consequence \ldelphia steumers {ron Chagres hod tr-. in Aiver Coun, | ol aking alarge dose of morphive. A rived al New York, briogeng-e valinble: prescription for ‘quinine’? was answered freight of $500 000 in gold, exclusive of by the Apothecary’s clerk with a pre-ja large amount inthe hands of passengers, recently been discovere. ; ty N. B, Its said to ve Roary as white | aa Italian Alabaster. ‘(lie quarry is the rty of an American—Mr. Fouler of the Lubec Plaister Mills, whois. abou: cotistructing a Railway four miles in therefrom to the nearest ehipping point. | The Fredericton Reporter says ‘a fellow who owed ue a for four years papers, at- iempted last week to get rid of his bill by denying his name. ‘That's what our con- temporary calls ‘Patronage.’ The Post Office will not be transferred to the Colonial authorities till January. No communication on the subject has yet been received from the Home Govern- ment; but though the necessary docu ments should arrive by the mail now due the new arrangements required to be utade will oceupy the Officers, we under- #tand full three months.— Montreal Pilot 4 The Toronto Globe denies the report, that a Coalition Government is contem- plated in Canada, and asseris that the Constitutional Reform party in that pro- vince needa no assistance. a ——— United States. MOVEMENTS OF JENNY LIND. Boston, Ocr, 11, 1850.—The charity concert last night wasa crowded one, passed off to the entire satisfaction of all concernes. The receipte are estimated atover $10,000, They will, itis said. de distributed by a Committee, of which ‘the, Hon. Edward Everett is Chairman. _ On Saturday, Mr. Gillmore, in behalf of the Railroad Company, tendered Mr, Barnum a special car over the Worcties- ‘Aer Rail Road via New Haven rovte, to New York, to convey Mdlie Jenny Lind and suite on Monday. We understand Sir. Bernum has signified his intention of selecting this route to New York, and: will Jeave Boston this morning. The company will proceed to. Philadelphia Without tarrying in New York, Miss Lind w:|! sing in Chesnut Street Thea- tre, on Thursday evening next, the 17th inst. Miss Linxp'’s Cuarnity.—We under. _@tand that of the sum accruing from the valucd,— and beloved bp a large circle, who are| Mail, (thrown into the deepest grief at the me-| ianeboly ternaination ofber life, ded at} scription of imorphine, young lady was dead, all efforts to save her being unavailing. Reporter tn Perricoats.—Mrs.Swiss- heim, who had acquired sone celebrity asan editor, has turned congressional, reporter, and is now one of the hons, of the senate chamber. ‘The New Englan- der says, “The old reporters eye her askance, end do not relish such an in- irusion upon their gallantry ; but sne don’t care for the:m.”—American paper. Mertinae oF Fuartive Staves 18 Boston.—A meeting was held at the church of Rev. Mr. Snowdon, last even- mg, ¢ouposed of the fugitive slaves reviding in Boston. tike measures for their protection against the operation of the infamous fugitive slave bill. A committee of seven was chosen to draft resolutions and ma- a future meeting. There ate now be- tween three and four hundred fuvitive slaves residing in Boston. Some of them Boston Traveller. mer season have the streeta of our city as have visited us during the two past months, We have published a stateinent that the receipts at the late Fair of the Vechanics’ Association exceed the sum of $20,000. Probably, upwards of a tuadred thousand persons visited that exhibition, and full two thirds of that lnumber were non-residents in Boston. upwards of a hundred thousand persons \during the past few months, and the other prominent places of amusement ‘pitronage during the season.—Bosion Transcript. Reciprocity.--The Senate recently refused, 5y a very emphatic vote, to take up the bill granting geciprocal free trade with Canada, only fourteen mwerm'iers Charity Concert, on Thursday night, four hundred and Twenty-five dollars, “ mis- ¢ellaneous,” were distributed as follows ; To Messrs. Charles & J. M. Spears, to be appropriated to the reformation of the ‘voting in the affirmative. It was an ‘uowise step for the friends of that mea- ‘sure to move to takeit up at this juncture when but a few days of the session re- main, within which a great deal of bu- Prisoner, $225 4siness of more direct inierest to the coun- ‘Yo a poor Swedish woman, the mottier of nine children, * 100 To a poor woman of Boston, $100 A New York paper piononnces Miss Lind “an ange! of benevolence.” She 18 truly 80, In Ilem of Barnum’s Expenses —On “Saturday, Mr. Barnum paid $260 to twelve of the daily papers for advertising only three concerts in Boston. Fauuine or a Pier, anv Loss or Lire. — Yesterday afternoon, a terrible accident occurred on the North River. The ship » Western World, from Liverpool, had been unloading the last two or three days at pier No.8; and, yesterday, a quantity of pig iron, amounting to about 150 tons, had been removed from her and laid in one spot on the dock, and: several carts and men Were engaged in putting it on board a bargue, which lay at the end of “the wharl, From the great weigit of the iren, being ali in one spot, the pier gave Way, precipitating certs, horses, men and ‘Women into the river with a terrific crash and commotion of the water. The ship and barge were caused io rol] for a con- ederable time, The scene was frightful. try hasto be attended to. It would have been much better to have permitted it 10 go over to the next session, when there will be more time to attendto it. The refusal to take it up, however, must not be looked upon in the light of opposition, for itis highly probable that it will yet be passed.— JV. Y. Herald. Capiran Punrsimenr.—Ata meeting ofthe opponents of capital punishment in this town of Essex, Mass., on luesday of last week, the following ‘resolve, amongst others, was adopted ; Resolved, ‘That in future we will not vote for any man as our Representative to the State Legislature whois not known to be opposed to the longer perpetration of judicial killing in this Commonwealth, Puinvaverpuia, Oct. 16,—Jenny. Lind arrived last evening and proceeded. to Jones’, Hotel. ‘The excitement all along the route was very great—people climb- ing to the top of the cars, onening the windows, ect., tosee her. Qn her arri- val here a dense crowd followed ‘her to the Hotel, at the window of which she appeared. ‘The excitement far exceeds that in New York, or Boston. The Potato Rot.—A achooner arrived here last. Friday from Nova Scotia, with Aman named McCaffey was recent!y executed at New Haven, with another aa'e@. clor, wo protested his innecence tbe met tiree hundred barrels of potatoes, only fyleen ot which proved goed at the tune of opening ihe hatches, ‘The medicine, was taken at 7 p m.,and at ] a.m. the ture a plan of protection, and report at) nenny-a-liner. have resiled here many years, whe neve of the Islander with some trash which had acquired property, and are respectable and heen dressed up in fifty different shapes useful people; yet they are liable to be apprehended and sold inte slavery.-— STRANGERS IN Boston.—At no for- been thronged by such crowds of persone jaf his last paper, for about the twentieth When shelmore than once, given a very good ear- —- LATER FROM CaLironnia.—The Phi- the totel amount being hardly short of $1,000,000. ‘ . ‘ af ne The ECxaminer. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 50, 1850. , “CHEAT AND ESCHEAT.” Tints is the caption to along and tire- ‘publishing which the writer has had patience by such a inass of stupidity and folly. Duncan has the genuine tact of the Facts, arguments, or ideas are of no Consequence to him; so that he ean spin out words—filla column ‘before, he seems to be perfectly satisfied, and convinced that he is 2 real genius at editing a newspaper, ‘The stuped lie which he has stretched over a column time, we believe, may be explained away in a few lines. He states that the Liberals pledged ‘themselves, privately, at the last Election, ‘to obtain an Esebeat of the lands in this Island, if the constituencies would give soine rigmarole in the last Islander, for}, sense enough to apologise to hia readers,| The object was to conscious that he had outraged their nestof his mtentions on the floor of the lioase, ia reference to the subject, Mr. Maclean is anxious to make the Electors believe (and (his appeare to be the chief object of his editorial), thee because the Proprietors S\ipported Mr Coles at his first election in 1842, he cannot now be sincere in his Professiona of attachment to the interests of the ‘enantry, and that consequently neither. rhe nor any of his party ought to receive the suffrages of the electors at any fo ture election. The absurdity of thie reasoning is too palpable for refutation. Duncan might have added, that not only did the Proprietors support Mr. Coleg, but the whole of the Charlottetown Cliquay” |who now pay Maclean for defending them. When these gentry, found howe ver, that Mr. Coles’ votes were not a. » regietered in their favour, they exer cined all their influence, good, bad, and) indifferent to keep hit out of the Assem © bly.. Another weighty reason advanced by Mr. Maclean, to shew that the presen! majority of the Assembly cannot possibly settle the land question, is, that My» Warburton-—a member of that majority —isan Agent! Now, Mr. Warburton's position as such could not possibly pre- vent the Assembly from entertaining. the question of purchasing the lands, (the only settlement contemplated, we bel even if he were opposed to that measure, which we know he is not; for much se he is respected, and great as hie influenee may be, in the House, he is not so ab- surd as to suppose that the whole of hie party would abandon any favorite scheme in deference to him ajone. But we know Mr. Warburton’s sentiments sufficiently well, to be able to assure the publis that the tenantry will ever find him e { openly, because they knew its fulfilment have each received a liberal share of|to be impracticable, and that they cheated) the people into the belef of getting free land for them, merely to get seats in the Assembly for themselves. As may be readily imagined by ail who have not seen the editorial referred to, there is not an atom of proof to support this impudent assumption. Because Mr. Maclean takes a walk every Sunday to astonish the gaping yahoos of New London, by re- tailing the political gossip he picks Up) at the Jalander office, and receiving in} return marvellous disclosures about the discovery of great boa constrictors in that favoured Jocality, measuring in length three panels of a fence, he claims and doings of the Colony, than any other public writerin it! and thereupon pro. ceeds toeay that he will enlighten us how the Liberals abandoned their promise of escheating the lands. This enlightment consists of the astonishing inteliigence. that some years ago, Mr. Coles declared toa meeting of his constituents at Lot 20 or 22, that so soon as Responsible Governméht would be put in operation, the Liberals would have the power of setiliny the Jand question to the satis. faction of the tenentry. If Bir. Coles made thie declaration, he was perfecily right in go doing, end we are ready to endorse it. But neitherdd Mr. Coles ner any of his party mean to revive the agnation for Escheat. There are other ways beside that, of setuing the land question ; and Mr. Coles has since. Burr’s famous Mirror has been visited by|them a majority in the Assembly—that/ warm supporter of any feasible and equi- they were arfuid to avow this pledge table scheme for advancing their inte- ‘rests, But ifit were true that the Liberals '¢ ould not consistently carry out their views on the subject of the Jand tenure, for the two ridiculous reasors advanced iby Mr. Maclean, what have the tenantry ‘to expect fromthe labours of that indivi- ‘dual, and the party who support him? Is he not backed by the most illiberal, by the worst Proprietors and Agents, is and out of the Assembly? What have the tenantry to expect from Mr. Maclean's co-operation with Palmer, Haviland, Douse, Yeo, Thornton, M*Donald, Gall, Hodges, and many other Agente aaé Proprietors we could name, some of whom have rendered themselves deserv- to nave a better opporiunity of arriving edly obnoxioas to the tenantry by « Jong atthe truth of all the political sayings)career of fraud, persecution, and tyranny? These are the people for whom Macleas is the mercenary apologist on all oceer sions; aud yet he has the unparalleled effrontery to say, that no hope ia to de expected from the Liberals, because Ms. Coles was once supported by Land Agents and Proprietors, and because Mr. War- burton holds an Agency, for one Town- ship, by the exereise of the duties of which he has long held the affection ané esteem of all his tenants! Ihe incom- parable stupidity and folly of the whole of Mr. Maclean’s editorial, only shew the lamentable straitsto which he is 1 duced for accusations against the k* berals. Earatom.—In the Examinex of $s- tuvday it was stated, that the Custom House returns in Canada “shew an ta- crease of neerly half a million over the