7s / — ee ee —_ ———— —-- ee — — —_ ea “ Ay roor in bia train! let thine orators Jash Their fanciful spirits te pamper his pride Not thua did thy Grattan indignantly flaeh ITis soul o'er the freedom implored aud denied (Continued from first page.) and you were gilent for money! In 1773, while a negociatien was pending to sell your talents and your turbulence, you absconded rom your duty in parliament, you forsook your law of Peynings you terseok the questions of economy, and abandoned all the old themes of your former declamation ; you were not at that peried to | he found in the House ; you were seen, like s guilty spirit, haunting the lobby of the House of Commons, watching the moment in whieh the question should be put, that you might vanish; you were descried with a criminal anxiety, retiriec from the scenes of your past glory; or you were perceived coosting the upper benches of thie House hke a bird of prey, with an evil aspect and a sepulehra note, meditating te pounce on its quarry. ‘These wars—they were not the waye of bonowr—you practised pending a negotiation which was to end either in your sale or your sedition: the former taking i aa . lalate nant lace, you supported the rankest measures that ever came before W ith the skill of an ¢ irpheus to aoften the eek Dartioanent the embargo of 1776, for instance. “ O fatal embar With the fire of Prometheus wo are — TU #0, that breach of law and ruin of commerce!" You supported) Even Tyranny, listening, sate re m. — lance of his mind.” the unparalielled profusion and jubbing of Lord Harcourt’s scan- And Corruption shrunk scorched trom ihe g a 8859 dalous winiatry—the address to support the American war—the ther address to end 4,000 mea, whem you had yourself declared to be neseseary for the deotence of Ireland, te fight against the liberties of America, to which you had declared yourself a frend —you, Sir, who delight to utter execrations against the America comunasioners of 1778, on account of their hostility to America; — 2 Mig you, Sir, who taanufteture stage thunder against Mr. Eden, for his subject of Eloquence, of which he was as much a master in his aathAmerican principl-e;}—you, Sir, Whom it plearrs to chant a) eg as Grattan. Curran was no statesman hymn te the immortal Hampden;—you, Sir, approved of the} OW peculiar es : " chnmateie Miaede fn. Dealhe, tyranny exercised ogainat America;—and you, Sir, voted 4,000) like Grattan, bor did be eyer distingui 1 Hip . a a Irish troops te eut the throats of the Americans fighting for their} ment ag an orator, though he always ranked bimself on the freedom, fighting for your treedom, fglting for the great priuciple opular side. His patriotism was as uvseltish and incorruptible liberty; but you toand at last (and this should be an eternal lesson | ' “thi t of any ocher man of his time; and his courage to mien Of craft aud cunning), that the King had ouly dishonoured| 45 SHH" OS : . ne J it ss = you; the Caurt had. bought, but would wot trust you; and having} pr mmpted him to overleap every obstacle, ang o treat even Foted for the worst measures, you remained for seven years the with scorn and derision the bayonets of the British soldiery creatare of salary, wituout the confidence of Government. Mort resented to his breast, when the Law Courts were crammed fied at the discovery, and stung by di tinent, you betake your- | self te the sad expedients of dupleity ; you trp the s temmmer lo your progresa to the acts of an ry endiary ; , “ ¢ the st . . : Lonest support to the Government or the people; you, at the most) ang merey in the persons of the unfortunate victims of ertical perive of their take no part, you sign NO Hon! }» igh misrule, placed upou their trials for high treason ie rree met uu are wu olunteer, You oppose no per-| — S ; es ; litead tantl mag ig om on a ~ a biil i . = doe. that oon Cvoufronting the armed mercenaries on one Occasion in the eluant mu ny Hi, WO Altered suvgs yiil; you deci at y “as : : om f P a lament that the declaration of right abeuld have been brought for-| Four Courts, while in the widst of a burst of passionate ward; and observing, with regard to prinee and people, the most! eloqyence, Curran said: * You may assassinate, but you ties oe bey oe rt rr - alee shall not intimidate me.” The Law Courts during the Sovereign by betraying the Government, as you had soi people : | ce . ms het ‘ F the. some until at lust, by this bellow conduct, and for some other steps, the! prosecution of the State rials, which pet oF of pres result of mortified ambition, being diemissed, and another person | spiracy of what was cailed the Unired [ris amen, and whieh put in your place, you fy fo the ranks of the vuluiiceers, and can-| yrecipitated the unfortunate rebellion of 1798 — were the > m: . ounce t! he ecountr t ined | ther | . R's . a : . ha eae tes nerioa | vaane a eT rs mold mes Your | Heatces of his great achievements. In fact, his whole en net 1g t period in hich she had Hee Sat yy You, p = ; . : @ . mM, . ¥ ab lei inte tae logic is, that the repeal of a declaratory law is pot the repeal of a} ufe centred in those trials. They left bim 5 p law wt all, aud the effect of that logic ts, an English act affecting) Parliameutary displays, even i he bad ihe taste for Par- to emancipate Ireland, by exercising over her the legislative autho aweotary duties. But bis talents and inclination uufitted rity of the British Parliament. Such has been your conduet, and bia for Parliament. He was not capable of grasping at such conduct every order of your fellow-eubjects have a right to ' ’ : Sk sn exclaiu! The mérehant may say to you—the constitutionalist may | economic details, and dealing with dry acts of Parliament say to you—-the American may say te you—aund I, [ now say, and! Bat whee an invocent maa was doomed to legal assa-§:D- Ever glorious Grattan, the best of the good! So simple in heart, se sublime in the rest— With all which Demosthenes wanted, endued, Aud his rival ov victor in all he poasessed. Ere Tully arose in the zenith of Roine, Phougl unegnalled, preceded, hit task was begun ; But Grattan sprang up like a god from the temh, Of ages the first, last, the saviour, the One! CURRAN. I have left myself searcely any time to speak of Curran, whose character I intended to sketch in connection with the Gise pol ry game ofi : i : ’ \ eloquent advocate while vindicating the cause of truth, justice you give! existence say to your beard: Si: you aré not a5 benest man.’’* , 7 ?! where ; » liberties is country cloven dowa Fiood made a feeble attempt at a reply to this specch, and, —where he saw the liberties of bis country clove . . ‘ieee nines ace! » » ,ove ant | then left the House. Grattan was alieady absent, and it| through organiz d iaseality bouuded on by Governmen was appreheaded that a duel would ensue. Both members| —Wwhere he saw the very toeutagus of justice poisoued zr were, however, taken into custody, and bound over to keep | (heir source—there was Curran Unsurpassed for boldacss, the peace; and no evil results followed. ‘The language used | eloquence, Integrity aud patriotism B at his speeches on by both members, in this great contest, was, in the highest | such Occ sions. says bis biographer, ** will for ever remain less degree, unparliamentary — that is, considering what is or | as models of eloquence than as examples of patriotism and what is vot * parliamentary,” uceordiog to the iuterpretatien | undying exhorta.lous 0 justice and liberty. Yet where, in at present pyt upon parliamentary pr cedents. If, in our) all the range of priated oratory, Cau We look for more elo- paitry apology for a Parliameot, one member said against juent and spirit-stirring passages than some of his speeches another anything half so severe as Flood said against Grattan, jon the State rials w ll supply? Several of the speeches de- or Gratiao suid against Fiood, there would be a tremendous|livered on those trials were suppressed by the Government uprour about “ breach of privileges; and the Sergeant-at- Those which are preserved to us cannot be inferior to any Arws would be seeo flourishing his white stick over the of-/ that are lost. Though Carran never wrote his speeches be- feading wember, at the dictation of an ignorant, despotie | fore delivery, and took very mvagre notes of what he had to and couceited wui »rity, who would not be considered worthy jsay, they read throughout like the most fisished com- to tie the laichets of the shoes of either Grattan or Flood. positions, perfect and compact in all their pats . , ; ‘ speech ia defence of Hamilton Rowan, which has Mr. Grattan pays a aigh tribute to the memory of his S'e*t speech aye ee : : r }, | been always admired, he bad only a few disjointed catch words, such as * Liberty of the Press,’ Vo.unteers,” and * Catholic Emaneipation,” and on these topies Se poured out rival, whom he survived. tu the following paragraph, whic occurs ig a pampblet addressed by him in reply to sou publications which ewavated from Lord Ulare oa the Union | quesiion — — 22 , Yor Perekine * “ Mr. Flood, my rival, as Lord Clars’s pamphlet calls Ken eee aise ‘h > esate nnn find it, and, indeed, to him, had faults; but be had great powers, great public aa all aii suttiines on tha inte Trak: in effect; be persaaded the old, he inspired the young; put} ay éannai i wh rt oe of os ek. & ; cat cio ; ' : ? : st d perusal, [ mast slic into his band a distaff, aud, like Herea es, ie made sad Work | your patience, while I read one short passage, which, though of ub; but give him the thunderbolt an ! he had the arm of a| ften recited at Debating Societies, will never lose iis fresb- Jupiter; he misjudged when he transferred bimseit to the | gese and relish apy more than if it were the finest poem in English Parliament; he forgot that he was a tree of the net Reiedimeaia foregt, too old to be transplanted at fifty ; and his seat in the oT British Pacliament is a caution to the friends of union to} “’ ape lemen, stay at home, and wake the couutry of tueir birth the aot Catholics of irelaud, and that is charged ae port of the libel svat of their action.” | they aad waited another year, it they had kept this prosecution impending fur another year, how Mr. Grattan's owe experience, as a member of the British | “ecide upon, I should be at a loss to discover. Lt seems as if the ; fai with the armed mwyrmidons of the C»stle to overawe the lation through the villainy and perjuries of ‘a hired informer | Se. Se A a ee : | it is with luctance, this i j j i j a must now close, but it is with some reluc i naiiibelion © ie 9 steve #0 oh * Heat te imperfect sketch of Curran. Another night will come, | its. orensic eloquence never attained loftier heigats r , | at aid in Roan’ speech on the trial of Peter Finnerty. | I hope, when I shall have the a —— stay ah “A man vamed Ore was convicted of high treagon on the/on Trieb Eloquence, and it . not i a, ee val ara) most outrageously perjured evidence. The Jury, after the will be suffered to se a : a Boe go ys ohne hscagad verdiet, sent in a written instrument, declaring that several an ace ees same — as'ahees e Se aad eee } , t what| proud o : , ‘of their body bad been made drunk, and they knew not wi te 1 geet? 5 edhe gg romp Teh . /, ict of guilty. The Vice-|cloquence of his country, 0 ng } oD ee AS ee spon oe ees tanc marble. * Fis life was full of labour, daring patriotism and | ‘regal Court was petitioned, under these circumstances, to ' u iregal Co us petl , e df. love, He shrank from no toil, avd feared no peril for | |exercise the prerogative of merey on behalf of Orr, and for a . as 4 ue. Sie Gia mn aolaaed| |time delayed his punishment, But the vampires of the) country, aud pent 08 xvi Pe. een tena oe | Castle ihirsted for the blood of the innocent man, and he was | by rule or vicious oa oe 1 ~ ee a © cae executed. Peer Finnerty, printer of a paper called the felt it noble and holy and joyous le a iwi Press, published a strong remonstrance against the Govern- that strength comes trate ae a - = i ment for this act of cruelty, and he was prosecuted for libel. | power—power of impassionate e10q 2 : . § Ou the trial ths Government made no attempt to deny the| power to comfort the afflicted, to guard the orphan, to rescue | clipe ye cat ge lear! roved that Orr was|his friend and avenge his country.—A companion unrivalled bars ee : i tl d wit; an orator whose thoughts went forth judicially mardeved, and his murderer was an infamous wretch | in sympathy ae ; Se aon baa ae ne ‘of an informer, who was afterwards hung himself, vamed like mipisters 0 eee eae rid abl SS aan ; ‘Jemmy O'Brien; but the Government rested its case on their hands ; a patriot sina atte ~ w o a .* the ground that publications such as Finnerty’s were calcu- trampled down, avd a a — a Z Ing : : ‘lated to bring the Administration into contempt, Thank climate, bis country, oor wore is coun eee : ould ‘God we live in a time when such a plea would be of no avail. study What he was and did, and his ecuntry guar a ame, When a Government gets into contempt by its own folly, or The study of the somone ot great men is one of the most é‘ sees the _jennobling of pursuits. Few can hope to be great or ‘treachery, or tyranny, all the world now recognises the pro . at ; . ie | pricty and necessity of an honest and independent Press ex- noble by invellect or wordly rank, but all may be good, all) \yosing it. Curran got his brief in Finnerty’s case only a few | may be uselul members of society according to their Oppor- onan before it was called on; he bad no time for prepar-| tunities, and this goodness and usefulness way be stitnulated jation; but the speech delivered by him on that occasion was and encouraged by learning how other men triumphed ove: | ’ . ka 7 : ce the ablest ever made by any advocate. He himself preferred difficulries—bow they won honour, and fame, and rich 2s by it to all his other efforts ; and alehough authors often greatly! sel! sacrifices, by devotion to the interests of mankind, avd by a proper use of the great powers with which God had en- lerr in their Opinions of their own works, as, for examp'e, : | Milton, when he preferred Paradise Regained to Peradise | owed them. Longtellow, the American poet, puts this thought in very beautiful Jines :— Lost, Currau’s preference in this case has been justified by the judgment of contemporaries and critics. One author says, speaking of this speech: “ His account of the duties of the | public writer deserves to be the very B.ble of the Press, it | heroically directs and 80 wisely justifies them, and his nar |rative of Orr's fate goes on so tenderly, so gently, so grandly, li hat one hardly knows whether to adwire its sagacity, pause |upon its lavish beauties, or weep over its Sorrows. it is the ; - jlument of ap apyel, | “ Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives aublime, And, departing, leave behind us Foot-prints on the sands of time.” The Irish people—and it is one of the,most beautiful traits | ia their character—are peculiarly tenacious in cherishing the wemory of their great men—no matter whether they were distinguished on tbe battle ficld, in the Senate, or in the | ‘To shew you wiat a vile wretch the Irish informer was in| walks of Literature. The ** dim religious light”? which fame ithe dark day of Lreland’s great troubles, when the first sym-| sheds upon the achievements of their poets, orators and vols of Saxon rule were the gibbet aod the bangmau— warriors, of a bygone age, is far more precious to them than ithe glare and grandeur of the present hour ; and the farther jthe ohject of their adoration is removed from them by the But by the baleful shadow she had throwa ‘lapse of time the more fervently their affections entwiue it, On all Aer fate—" aud the more romantic are the visions which bathe it in the 'L will, with your permission, read you two short extracts— | attractive hues of oeauty and excellence, ‘This propensity of “When hononr mourned, and freedom feared to sinile, When the bright light of England’s tae was kuowa ithe first is from the great s,eeeh on the trial of Archibald | ‘be Lrish mind to reeali and dwell with fondness ou departed 'Humilton Rowan, from which I bave already given av ex-| glory is fiuely illustrated in Moore’s melody, + Let Brin re-| é . i . ; » on 2 e a ; iract; and the second is from the seareely Jess eloquent and, Wember the days of old,” which she is never likely to torget, ae powerful speech on the trial of Patrick Finney tor high j treuson, rom the infamy of the Loformer as Ireland did during the | wuch the rebellion of the people aguinst the Governa.ent as No other couvtry in the werld has suffered so much | troubled period of what is commonly ecalied the Kebeilion o! | YS, * but which, as Grattan uly described it, was not s0| * When her Kings, with standard of green unfurled, Led the Red Branel Knights te danger, Ere the euerald gem of the western world Was set iu the crow of 4 stranger.” | } | | Neagh, which was supposed to have been originally a foun And then the poet recalls the tradition about Loch! } { } j i ' e| } For the} a flood of elk quence * unapproache 1,” says a hich authority, | ° } I toust advise you to but as we This paper, gentlemen, insists upon the necessity of emancipat- much would remain fer a jury to | ithe rebelliou of the Government against the people. a Al i ‘ Phe} tain, but by a sudden overflow, inuudated the surrounding | j Lnformer was the chief instrument of Government in all it8! country, buryiug uuder its lympid waves round towers and | | prosecutions against the uohappy victims of misrule; he was, other mouunieuts of ancient art :— |in most cases, the shadow of the hangmwau, for when he made ns On ' | “ . 1 “se 2 lt ae 9 t 2 uy ) ois appearance iw the witness box, the hangman Was Cen-)| On Loch Neagh " banks, nd c : _ ane — i . : S ae When the clear cold eve is declining, sidered to be close at hand. It is not possible to conceive | He sees the round towers of ether days ‘that amongst the demoas of the infernal regions there was lithe waves beneath him shining. such a coucentiatiou of villainy, ruffianism, aud cold blooded | Thus will memory or i. aaa sublime, | : \ og , . : | Catch a glunpse of the days that are over, > lt as 2 2; Hmeut { s use . sow : ¢ aa cruelty ag the Snot smont te ee preseated in, bis on And, sighing, look down through the waves of time {person ; and Curran has depicted his hideous character in | For the loug faded glories they cover.” colours which can never perish : — j : ee | TI have been looking down * through the waves of time” | “Gentlemen, I am not accustomed to speak of cireunstances of c 4 }this kind; and though familiarized as ] bave been to them, when J} for the wonumeuts of an Art far grander than that which gave }come to speak of tiem, ny power fails me—my voice dies within | round towers to Lreland, but | am afraid yeu will say that we. Lam uot able to call upon you. It is now T ought te breve jmy time has not been mach ber ter employed than that of the jstrength—it is now L ought to have energy and voice. But 1 herve | fisterman on the banks of Loch Neayh. juene; I am like the unfortunate state of the country—perhaps, lke Clie is the tune in which I ought to speak, if I can, or be | - a NG " T BEER & SONS, 7 , ¥ nh? i 33 RG SQN 3) dumb fer ever; in which, if you de not speak us you ought, you | AVE, hy the arrival of the ships ought to be dumb for ever. GAZELLE fron LIVERPOOL, URANUS trom LONDON, and CABOT from you. “Bat the learned gentleman is further pleased to say, that the | traverser has charged the government with the encouragement of | informers. This, gentlemen, is another small fact that you are to! fouths. You are upon your oaths to say to the sister country, that | jdeny at the bazard of your souls, and upon the solemnity of your | 1 vment of Ireland uses no such abominable instruments of the gove destructieg as intormers. Let me ask you honestly, what do you were within his reach; but he thought the noblest . eeu pa- tion of @ man was to make other men happy and free; and in that straight line he went on for filty years, without one wide-luok, withoat one yielding thought, without one motive in his heart which he wight uous hizve laid opea to the view of God and man. Ie is gone '—but there is not a single day | of lie honest life of which every good [rishman would not be more | proud than of the whole political existence of bis countrymen | the eunus: betrayers aud deserters of theig native land.”’ George the Fourth visited Ireland in 1821. The Irish peo- press Was troddeu under foot—wheu venal sheriffs returned packed juries, to carry into effect those fatal conspiracies of the few against the many—-whea the devoted beuctes of public justice were filled by sume of those toundlings of fortune, who, overwhelmed ip the torrent of corruption at an early period, lay at the boitom, like drowned bodies, while soundness or sauity remained in them; but, | ai length, becoming buoyant by putrefaction, they rose as they rotted, | and floated to the surface of the polluted stream, where they were driited along, the objeets of terror, aud contagion, and abonnuation. | “In that awful moment of a natiou’s travail, of the last gasp of ty ranny, and the first breath of freedom, how pregnant is the exau- tele ' i lallowed te have a President of their pwn choice for the whole Re- {publie; and hence they rushed into revolt. The English peopie jadmire them for this; and Rebellion new puts on dignity in propor-! jtion to the strength and extent of its assuinptions and snecesses. | | By and bye the aduirers of the South will allude to the “ rebellion ” I now in progress in words not less spirit-stirring, but not more har-| mouious, than were used in reference te t= men of Ninety-Kight by one with whom I should be glad to exchange my bumble courtesy in| admiration of their valour and patriotism :— “ Who fears to speak of Ninety-Eight ? Who blushes at the name? GEORGE DOUGLASS. Corner of Kent Street and King s Square. Charlottetown, Nov. 30, 1863. Chance to Make Money! FANHE Subscriber bas in bis Yard at “* Brown's Makt,”” Egmont Bay, a quantity of JUNIPER TIMBER, sneh as Plank-logs, Beams, Footocks, Kuees, &c.,—ualso, Kel, Stem und Stern Post, consisting of the principal part of the material to build a Juniper vessel, of 700 ton8,—alse, a good : tn ; : regress of public information was eating away the ground of the : “Sagem niger ; GLASGOW, nearly completed their | Parliament, gevea sad verification to the truth of the remark Preaek tua ls dieemonaciiias of the prosecution, this p bins feel, when in my) wn ae iu the face of this audieuce. you are } AL ASG ee ee contaiued ju the last part of this quotation. vf the libel has ualuckily received the sanction of the legislature. In a = He gai caeious cee ae oe a Se aa * FALL IMPORTATION S, | : * i. you Know, i? [es iO ’ ure reyes, lo De Ulleriv amido . , } that interval our Catholic brethren have obtained that admission, |? : TT. : : ' : .* aa | e ‘ "Or > ’ >i solutelv faise spenk t ; * ic oclaims ) rv | oad . : see From what I have written, and from the extracts I have which, it seems, it was a libel to propose; in what way te account rr ane J noes . oe ae ae aston cae aa " Phe Goods per above vessels, in addition to these read, you can now form some estimate of Gratian’s Sty:e of} for thia, I am really at a loss. Have any alarms been occasioned eats pe a - fate of teas horrid po " tohe gin aay * ike previously received, comprise in part:— : - . . ‘ ‘ | Spe the retches ‘ lave bee ” . eloquence, His reported speeches bave beea long the | by the emancipation ef our Catholic brethren? has the bigoted ma- | ft n transferred from the table to the dock, aud Teal the deck to| Supertine Cloth, Scarlet, White and . ee il . ‘ iain ed ce oe. . ae > « a + &@ a “o a “ f ". 2 etheme cf adwiration with scholars, commentators and | svity of any Pamrerie bee a. d? or bas re stability 4 the | the pillory; [speak of what your own eyes have seen, day atter day Beaver and Whitney Blue Flanuels, — . ra : : : . government, -or that ¢ » country been weakened; or is one millior a kien!’ : oT “— . hite and poets. They all agree in placing him in the first rank f Oo “a mger a = 4 a = Nien “— cialis Vain ate a * : ) during the course of this comission, from the box where rou are | : Pate iF D "hie Feite | tei : r hn: ' . a ee See. TSO UST Miene 7 ink tnat tre; ing: the rT “yj inerean ackuowledeed. |* Slack and Faney Doe- Shi , } @3 @ Culllyator of that Art which be 80 DOD y pra ‘tised for beneit they received should be poisoned by the sting of vengeance ? | pats mae Po ern 1 Ps Yorn ej - ft . rs kuowh (le d, | ie r Flannels, | \ — : el oO is, : ay d © . ‘Bex “i ‘i cia : ” ] : the gi ry end trborty of his country. Asa pure, disinterested, | It you think so, you must say to them—* You bave demauded eim- fron th in ae r a the Castle or “a aa I be A ‘h i| Tweed and Sealskins, eee Feneel Shirt, ge - . j ce 7 4! ’ re i ‘ i : i i gg . ro he y enat ‘ts *Castie— ere ey tiie eeu orked | stun a aie 2 ote "Eien wose.Ssb patriot. he had no superiors in any age or country ; | *tPatcon, and you bave got it; but we abhor your persons, we are npon, by the tear of death and the hope of compensation, to give | Plain, Checked and | Mufflers, Scarfs, Ties, c ‘ “: aes ¢ outraged at your success, aud we will stigiatise by a criminal pro- ee nea i : poeerrost, 80 GIVE | Striped Wincies Collars, Gloves, —ior courage. ‘or virtue in ali its godlike shapes, he sands ‘ ae 1. WA’ evidence against their fellows; that the mild, the wholesome, and} Striped vw ’ i : . j pa” os -"' seention the adviser of that relief which you have obtained from the ; ai j i ee ? French Merinoes, Gents’ Fur, Cloth and likewise UbSsurpass d. And us to his eioguebee, it 13 NOL DY) gpice of your country.” Task you, de you think. as honest men puereerers ls - It nate caaun are peers these cntacombs | C clean, Wool Caps Silk, on : ; . ores apt, i : ee ’ of living death. Where the wretch that is ied wane ies is a - ‘ .. ' oWn opinion L shal! offer, but the opinions of others, to shew | anxious for the public tranquility, Conscious that there are wounds . % drt ‘a : te ‘ : bl - ee Pages " cena ~— _ Lustres "and Faney Cloth and Felt Hats, | . > : ° ‘ . adel i Rtas lila ‘ vo ae oo. : leart bas time ester ap SSOIVe, al 8 lhe gx upi: itnhess ! ” : . , i -@ | bat he had gearcely a rival and no victor in ancient or!” ta Mah hoe oe Ney hace d dear - s language 6 1s thie a picture created by a hag-ridden faney ee is it a fact 7} ay é neers ¥ ik “ty ° . . vy} OC fs tine, to men who are too mueh dispose hink that in this wa in a ° ey : 7 a +h i 13 sloves, &c, in variety, } modern times, , Of all the great Parliamentary Orators, : . a : : hart “ tl a a rv a ’ j o a aol wa zn ; oe Have you bet seen him, after his resurrection from that region of) Skictings, ‘TP . | i . , 2 ; .ery bikiac “hide ie ave Dec aves ron imeirsown pariamen ‘ ud i . a io f “aie i. { “_—" 1.5 ¥ ‘ ° . aaln o ‘ . . s . ae . ‘ “ath ¢ : ola ‘ari be zDie, > | j Says z - ots biographe ra, * whose speec ues hav» beeu pre- by the humanity of their Sovereign? Or do you wish to prepare = — wi he aplah boda Saag Gadvendy aan’ on we ho Have | Fall and Winter Mantles and served, those of (rattan are most worthy of perusal by the | them for the revocation of these inprovident concessions? ya PES &Ore peepee ane : : » 7. | a 9 the stud omy T ; r ; 7° > a i z : think it w ~ er Saal til ia iaeanhenae suena , wt jyou not marked when he entered how the stormy wave of the mul- Mantle Cloths, } retective and the stad-ous, be speeches al it and Sheri-| ‘a fm “ a the 4 an wl ) d red to stand forth . a Par titide retired at his approach?) Have you not seen how the human ra | FURS dan read in the study as so wueh rheorc: b 9x's orat ons} lhe ‘2 se Cae a e as pe wi —_ _ Mu ’ 7 ae heart bowed to the supremacy of his pewer, in the undiaseimbled | Fitch, Oppossum and ot 1er U Dy , 7 ; ; | wat to ve atis; do you thiak that a blessing of the hi . iE Se - atone tilew , i are the missive remains of a wonderful debster: the Subp | tack 0 cieteier Gitained br lection cece pee _ a8 a | at i | howage of deferential horror? low his glaoce, like the lightning of | RIBBONS the h , ; : bie 4 w Ah gt sa, a tg SNE CPPLESSION, SHOU | 1 Leven, seemed to rive the body of the accused, and mark it for the | 2 ’ of e. tint interests of “? es Ccd jy too wo. : on a ~~ na Cast as it by an ighon IH]GUS Be wtenoe upou mets grave, while bis vuice warned the devoted wretch of woe and death in the New Shades and Styles; space In a i$ speeceues, Whicd, aller ail, Were ‘ made to be | OOM SN honest Gioeuga to propose that measure? to propose the |° a death which no innocence can escape, ro art elude, no foree Wi j t F . redeeniing of religion t hye 2 i leet OR tt 8 — { at ic 1 I , 1c i é » | , | ppoken, and not tobe reed.’ Burke bad two distinct Biy les), t! ie nl - hs : fn ; t 5 oo a it eres resist, no antidote prevent. There was an antidete—a juror’s oath ! Fall and inter Shawls, i _ si - i Or te hi ; ow e re wonduige, u giving liberty tor ‘ 4 ie . » shat aS sority P = . - —one grave and didactic, as tn his Aineriecan spee bes, which | had a right te aia rye a : I "7 oe 8! : 5 _ y to all wi j —but even that adi mau tine ‘ hain, that bound the inte grity of man together with a large variety of useful epokem easace. when be wea:ied his he — ye “ is of th reer on? Grvemae © Sie 50 SNe an suck ceasured | ta the throne of eternal justice, 18 solved and molten im the breath , ‘ * ere spo ? e83ay8, Wed be Weak fe ee OOy Rete ae paper, © UNIVERSAL EMANCIPATION!” [ speak iu the that issues from the informer’s mouth; conscience swings from her DD R y G qd O D ss ‘ delighted bis readers. In the other style be was diffuse, and *Pitit et the British law, which makes liberty commensurate with | inoorings, and the appalled and affrighted juror consulis his own exseutially rhetorical. But Grattan blended two Styles into " d es t006 ype frow oe soil; which laims even a we lsafety in the surrender of his vietins :— Ladies’, Misses’ and Children's . ' +: : stranger aud the sojourner, the moment be sets his foot upon British | - } -y ; shi! 4 L~ ; , “ ca : : sine : < as aud dina ed those who listoaed to him, while he Spoke | earth, that the ground on which he treads is holy, and cousecrated | Et qnx sibi quieqne timebat, Koots & Shoes, #0 a8 to Instruct ereo posterity. He was never 5 irpassed | by the genius of UN(VeRSAL EMANCIPATION. No inatter in what | Unius in miseri exiliaur conversa tulere. a large éinettinehts f ; i sonhical ineinile ; iea! | ‘enguage his doom m: ave bee ‘onduneed: atter what | : : i : . for the ynion of philosophical le aod orasorical | cchhieitet h ee Tot . a Ta ams or yt ban MT Informers are worshipped in the temple of justice, even as the devil! : i . * Lord B i oplexion, ncompatihie with treedom, an lndi ueor an Atrican sun : } M d -Bovs’ heav energy or rougbam, who is a great warhority on ley tied tent pun hiss: wo wratior * eo st Bi abinaeie battle bie bas been worshipped by Pagaus und savages—even so m this wicked | ens’ an oy avy } cuN ( F e@ is eat Rolo i en - Le a a a ee Lee ia the eee bjec judicial idolatry—even so is he ee says . a No orator ot ” a is his oven lo the Hoerty way bave been cloven down; no matter with what seleanni- | ‘ oi = Svar tne et roses is he sheseted anal BOOTS and BROGANS, asy and Copious fluw of most profouud, sagaciou: liberal! | ties be may } mn devoted t » altar ‘vy: the firet | Seuthed OY thet a a i i . ° » “Et principler, eouacinted in terve apd striking, but mort’ npore-|mament be tonschen tho vested cst et i auiar ot slacery: the frst | irceneed by the fuuice und by the blood of human sacribees | Ladics’, Gents’, Misses’, Youths’ and Children’s pr ‘pier, ciate erse and strik ng. Dut most appro-| ( iM be touche s sacred suil o ritain, ea i 1c £ " | priate language.” Sie James Melo sh, @ great scholar, a te copter eerie satt ae iti Paar aaa ae “ Give me leave to put another —_ y —* hat is the Pree RUBBER BOOTS _ ee - " a - te | on : se ,) 8 Body swens deyond tue measure of bis chains, ; ; that you deliberate—that you condescernd to listen te me with such of the very best manufacture. Ladies’ RUBBE | ea, ae ib se ne f G a we w' areund bim; and he stands redeemed, regenerated, and diswuthralled, | vit ution? Why are you so anxious, if, even from we, anything | ad FELT BOOTS, &e. &e. | ite rougnam, thus speaks Of Grattan: © When | by the irresistible genius of UNIVERSAL EMANCIPATION.’ ts ' oli he present awful oceasi a ” ~ P 3 ) ; lshould fall tending to enlighten you on the present awful oceasion 7 | | the ili¢striogs dead are gathered io one tomb, all national , me because, bound by the sacred obligations of an oath, your heart Our usual assortment of : : U loDal pT ‘ . ial t “ty the regs is tis, because, 5 he 8% £ of CUE NCE | | @istine ions fade away ; apd out even the illustrious name: . The fo lowing rhort passage on tne ii very of Pp ti will not allow you to torfeit it. Have you any doubt that it is the | EX Fz DW AR Ee | of Burce eed Welling ou were more Certain hisiorie bas far superior to the e oquent and often admired remarks of | object of O'Brien to take down the prisoner for the reward that | A , Mas ¥ 4 ; : e ‘ ue , * ° i . 4 + - f Grat: ” ¥ ’ ~ |e Semeee Melntosh, ou the same subject, in the famous libel | fyjiows !) Have you not seen with what wore than instinctive keen- | P AT NTS GI ASS PUTTY &e | that of Gratian, x ; ; oe ert ae mist hag lation’ have hoo ene bene 0 PAINILDS, a ‘ iy &e. { vase at the suit of Napoleon Bonaparce. Curran’s tribute to | ness this blood-louie has pursied his victin? how he has kep: him | | “ More a any Irish patriot of his age, Grattan was| ihe liberty of the press—the grat bulwark of all other liberty iets w eran ee ty a nc 4 Paint, Olive, Seal, Cod, and Kerosene a! 0 tb an 2 @ iove@e \ 20 ; ‘ ] rd Ee ; oO e Con <r. F ve ' . .* we . oe! luus as te e ae om emp oyed, It A not e OULN | __has pever been surpassed for ek quenee, spirit, grace and lsuccour but that which your verdiet shall afford. I have heard wf OILS, to have gOrlous Cnusa—he strenuously insisic: taroughout | $ . -5¢) i a3 f wisd< hich | neiass I ‘d, by pistol i by dagver: br ia Sn a Agh0 beauty of composition—and for tke !essons of wisdom which | assassination yy sword, by pistol, and hy dagger; but bere is a bis life on the Becegsity of Worthy means His moral charact ° | tch who would dip the Evangelists in blood; if he thinks be has | ‘ | . oe . 'Ohiatracter it imparts to rulers and ruled in every land :— ) wretco Who ust. ee : _? 45 . a G: CE stands out io Promivent relief amidst the veuality aad selfish | 9 : jnet aworn his victim to death, he is ready to swear, without meres ae : ! ness of his contemporaries.” The preat reformer aud phi.) “ Whatther-remaine? The liberty of the press on/y—that sacred | and without end: but, ob! do not, I canjure you, suffer him to take 8 complete as: ortinent, and allof first-class quality. lantkropist, Wilberforce, said ot ue ne r 7 f | palladiuin, which nv influence, no power, ro muster, bo government, fun outh; the hand ot the murderer should not pollute the purity ot Our "CEL ASS are very anperior. : h : ye be i never «new wiuch nething, but the depravity, or folly, or corruption of a jury, | the gospel : if he will swear, let it be on the /nife, the proper symboi s shined mao whose patriotiem aud love for his country seemed com | can ever destroy. And what calamities are the people saved trom, jf his profession ! The abovs Stock of Goods having been earefully letely to extinzuish all private intere-t ‘ : by having public communication left open to them? I will tell you, | selected, are ecoufidently offered to the public at srw ig mA #, aud to indace him} by Raving public on a ees ear aera i i Adedites cust teceaelt P to look invariably to the publie good,” | gentlemen, what they are saved from, and what the government is | eS ae bs ual 7 the lowest paying prices. . pune § ‘waved frow; I will tell you also to what both are exposed by shut-| * I have no qualuis of a to prevent me from be aring Charlottetowa, Nov. 16, 18¢2 6w de | ) a ic a cna s ; , Nov. 16, 1863. Qae short extract, fy'l of eloquence, pathos and beauty, | ting up that communication. In one case, sedition speaks aloud and | oper oe — tena — we he ore parce e ie eli Saeed craeeheotaieeliceia e pe: toy Sy ty Jnvland’s| Walks abroad: the deimagogue gova forth — the public eye is upon | wen of Ninety-hight. Ba ek a ae ee ° ? from the peo of the Kev. Sydney Swith, oue of England’s| walks ab hs —e r staae; but enue either wenn. [by the Jeanay O'Bricne aid Castleteaghé rather ede tu, than di- ‘pare ’ ‘or } he *ta his busy yur upon the stage; but seon either weari- | ¢ ‘ reatest Ornaments in literut d one of truest frie | bim—he frets bis oo I : “— 9 eae Or SS Sa ae Oe killa NR Oe i Be a as ' Je | ¥ ‘erature, and one of the truest friends | os or bribe, ot punishment, or disappoiatinent, bears him down, | Minishes their glory. The Minister saw that, before the Act of} that mankind ever had—and [ shall conciude this hnperfect | or drives him off, and he appears po wore. Iu the other case, how | Union could be carried, the vee le of Treiand should be driven into | i es act sketch of Grattan. Alluding ¢ shi vile clenders b@eleat tin | Goat the’ work af edition go forward?) Night after hight the muf. | armed resistance te the usurpations of the Tiperial Cabinet. i rom | GEORG EB DOU GLASS | a : ios Aled l h in tk I 1 i i t being the freest Parliament the world ever witnessed, the Lrish | : eon! lanc 6 he f aii d | Aed rebel steais forth in the dark, and casts auother and another | beit ne arnam ia eve sssed, the shh | ‘ ¥ | Ay oF peolen i by toeir Bugli h persccutors and Oppressors, | Grand upon the pile, to which, when the our of fatal maturity ahell | House of Commons becaine the most slavish and corrupt,—it was, | Manufa cturer and Importer of Furnitur the Atev. Syduey Swit exclaims: larrive, le wall apply the terch. If you doubt of the horrid conse- | i0 its last ots. ie a place na peers Se edicts of the Mi- and Uphilstery Goods, pce ~euiis fusion evel lividus content «| hister,—and these edicts compassed every species of oppression cal. | «Th Duin ide: a dass | ei ‘ + | quence of suppressing the effusion even of individual discontent, look | !'stel, hase ; | eee, a 's tl f ank God that - ig Dow pr fligacy and ¢ erEptes aoe tw those enslaved countries where ihe protection of despotism is sup- culated to crush the spirit of a once free and always chivalrous | R t3PECT FULLY solicits the attention } 16 histury of that devoted people—and that the name of! pssa te be secured by atieh restraints, Eveu the person of the | people. The old Thirteen Colomes of America had nothing at all | of such as are in want of FURNITURE to } Irishman does not always carry with it the idea of the op- | despot then is never in satety. Neither the fears of the despot, nor | Like the incentives to revelt which the people of Lreland had in 1798, | cull at Lis New and Spacious Ware-nooms, on the 1 pressor or the oppreseed—the plunderer or the plundered—tive} the machinations of the slave, have avy sluuiber—the one auticipat- j—the iwpolitic Stunp Act, and the silly tax upon tea, which drove} pe ted of Kent Street and King’s Sqdare, directly tytant or the slave. Great men hallow a whole people, and) ing the moment of peril, the other watching the opportunity of |the Americays into the so-called rebellion, were mild aud merciful | oie al alae of eS een os i lift up all who live in their time. What Irishman does not j aggression. The tatal crisis is equally a surprise upon beth: the | measures compared to the hangings, quacterings, burnings, Curtew Nid CkE Teddagibink oo new aot tenet | fee! proud that he has lived in ths days of Grattan? Who decisive lustant is precipitated Without w arning—by foily on the one Acts, and all the other instruments of tyranny which accompanied | Deshrhs: ah ons te found in this Cite. . } hae pot turned to him fur comfort [rom the false triends and side, or by freazy on the other; aud there is no notice ot the treason, | the administration of English Jeane In speeee The iajority oF His long experience in the business with facilities i open enemies of Ireland ? who did out remewher bom in the | til the traiter acts. In those Unturtinate countries -— one cannot ‘the people of England how syipathise with the Southern States in for prosecuting the same to advantage, combined j duys of its burnings and wastings, and murders? No Govern.) 84 it without horror— there are officers whose province it is to | their revolt against the North —— the people and rulers of England with moderate expenses, enables him to sell bis | ment ever distoa bi the world could not bribe hi; ie, wave the water which is to be drank by their rulere sealed up in| @pply the mild phrase of “ belligerants” to the Southern “rebels ;” | GOODS at much less per cent than any other Fnr- th h > af Toate 2 oe fi / bjec wait oo | bottles, lest sume wretched wisercant should throw puisen inte the | bat the Southern people were never oppressed by their Northern | niture store in this Island. Every article required ought only of relan —lived oF wo other object— edicated draught. ‘brethren — their State Legislatures were never subsidized and cor-| for Housekeeping supplied xt this Establishment. | to her his beautiful fancy, his elegant wit, his wanly couraze, “Rat: pentiomen. 36 vod wish fens erie ve S | rupted by a Northern Minister—tieir people could net be hung and | A few of those celebrated Clothes Wringers, a aud al tic splendour of his astunisuing eloquence. Lo was! ae ; ‘le - sa 1 - - ; a ee a nearer and more interes NS | quartered without a show of justice — their freedom of speech ov | oe — eo ee 2 : al ie “o ii e t iti > ' ya ur F 1 . : : : antiinary. i eo bora and ao gilted, that poetry, forensic skill, elegant © ipie, save tL ie distery of your own revolution. You | disenssion could not be destroyed ; in fact, their privileges could not | oe | : — . . } literatare dell the bichest att ” A bave it at that memorable peried when the monarch found u servile | : fovea witli" iin iis shat thee dined | _N B —One Superior Rosewood, 7 octave PIAN@ | ature, anda Highest atlainmerts of humuo genrus ucyieseenece- in the ministers of Lis folly —when the libelty ‘of tha (be interfered wiih in any way, only that they should not be always | FORTE, London make I ; The press extinguished, the people enslaved, and the prince gubinet: ehaied 1! : So 7 jUndone. As the advocate of society, thereture—of peace—of do- edits er Bem oh high Optert —s almost worshipped the! mestic liberty—and the lasting union of the two sahil ~I aay r ¢ as espot. No English mottarch ever | You to guard the liberty of the press, that great sentinel of the state, received such an ovation in Ireland as that grand detector of public usposture; guard it, because, when it “Tho fourth of the fi j sinks, there « nks with it, in one common grave, the liberty of the ait snes | Sudject, aud the security of the crown.” od I venerate the vere entiamaron tae savior. Dytee Sep beving lashed our| here is another speech I should like you all to reed—it in hte 8 iriting poem of the * Sich neous: ae he haved 1s especially worthy of the consideration of every cne who has one a ie guadibeniace, merrell a ws aa tuterest io seeing villainy exposed, truth aud justice vindi- t ‘ Ae B . : hot stoop to worship a worthless lump of clay like ‘Goon | cane geen: tte, Jouve Barrister it is a model eres. whieh tap Fr i tint y Sorge! much study cannot be employed—and for mankind it is the ourth, i Something to muke them proud by the refcction that the ple, in one of their fits of madness to which amercurial rave is vole and the despots cafled George ;”’ | When cowards mock the patriots’ fate, Who hangs his head for shame ? | He’s all a knave, or half a slave, Who slights his country thus ; But a true wan, like you, man, | Will fill your glase with us. “ We drink the memory of the brave, The taitbful and the tew— Some lie far off beyond the wave, Sou sleep in 8 Mee ; All—ail are gone—but still lives on The fame of those who died; All true like you, men, Remember them with vride.” new Mould and Model, tae whole of which he will seil on reasonable terms, with privilege of yard reom, &c., (if regnired) o build said vessel. He also offers for sale the “ull and Spurs of a superior new Brig, of about £30 ions register, (spruce, with hardwood bottom). Tuis vessel is of a good model, and built under the inspection of W. , Blogyet, Ksq., (Messrs. Lloyd's Avent). N. J. BROWN. Brown's Mart, Oct. 19, 1863. NOTICE. mae Subscriber will feel oblived to whose accounts are furnished, foran EARL® P ecttl yM. HEARD ement. Ch'town, Jan. 18, 1864. “Gil the & Hy SS OO EES Se ee ee eee “ RENFREW HOUSE,” THOMAS'S OLD STAND, GREAT GEORGE STREET. DELANY & WILSON, AVING completed their FAL, IMPORTATIONS, per Prtoress froin LIVERPOOL, URANUS from LONDON, and yessels fron BOSTON and HALIFAX, beg tw cali ine utteption of the public to their Extensive Stock of DRY GOODS, Groceries, Hardware, Furs, Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps, Ke, &e. ce. -——— COMPRISING —— Ladies’ Dress Materials in all the new styles, Coloured and Black Cobourgs, Wincies, Alpacas, French Merinos, Delaines, &e. &e. Ke. Shawls, Mantles, Bonnets, Hats, Plumes, Flowers, Ribbons, Bounet Borders, Gloyes, Hosiery, Woollen Hoods, Sontags, Skating Caps. Polka and Garibaldi Jackets, &e. Gentlemen’s Furnishing Goods, In Cloths, Tweeds, Clothing, Fur Caps in great variety of styles and quality, Mufflers, Lambs’ Wool Under Clothiug, White Shirts, Collars, Ties, Scarfs, Sik Handkerchiefs, Fancy Tweed & Fiannel Shirts, Braces, Rubber Coats, &e. &e. STAPLES, Grey and White Cotton, Striped Shirting, Prints, Ginghans, Bed Tick, Canvass, Osnaburg, Towellings, Table Cloths, White, Red, & Fancy Flannel, &e. &e. Ke, Meu’s, Women's & Children's Boots, Shoes & Rubbers, in endless variety. Skeleton Skirts & Cane Hoops, Very Cheap. GROCERIES, Tea (warranted superior quality), Sagar (very bright), Molaases, Tobaceo, Crushed Sugar, Soap, Candles, Starch, Pepper, Mus- tard, Baking & Washing Soda; Raisins, Currants, Spices, &e. &e. &e. TIARDWARE. Cut and Wrought Nails, all sizes, Plough Mount- ing, Chain Traces, Rope, Weaver's Reeds. Paint, Oil, Patty, Glass, Gunpowder, Shot, &c., &e., Ke. Homespum taken in exchange ior Goods, The highest price paid in Cash for Fur. tF° Customers will please -take particular notice of the Sign “Renfrew House.” Great George Street, Charlottetown, Dec. 7, 1863. ¥ rw isl p MAILS. Winter Arrangement. YHE MAILS for the ne‘ghboring Provinces and the United States will, until further notice, be made up and forwarded from the General Post Office, Charlottetown, every TUES- DAY, THURSDAY and SATUKDAY Evening, at 5 o'clock. For England, Newfoundiand, and Bermuda, every alternate THURSDAY, at 8 o'clock, p. m. ee Mails will be made up every SA- —_— TURDAY following, as follows : Thursday, Dec. 3ist, Thursday, Feb. 25th, Saturday, Jan. 2d, 1864, Saturday, “ 7th, Tharsday, * 14th, Thorsday, Mare 10th, Saturday, ‘+ 16th, Saturday, “ J2th, Thareday, ‘* 28th, Thursday, 24th, Saturday, 30th, Satarduy, “ 2th, Thussday, Feb. lith, Thursday, April 7th, Suturday, “ lth, Saturday, “ Q%h. L. C. OWEN, Postinaster-General. General Post Office, Charlottetown, Dec 28, 1863. ACURE TO BE HAD POR A TRIFLE Holloway’s Ointment. Gout, Rheumatism, Enlargements and Stiff Joints. A cure of these complaints is within the reach of the most hamble, by fowenting the affected part with wart salt and water, and rubbing in flolloway’s Ointwent twice aday. Thousands have been cured whe looked unen Gout and Rieumatism as inenr- able. The same treatment should be ewployed for the dispozsicn of chalk stones, and all painful en- Jargements or stiffness of the joints; in such cases the Pills should be taken according to the printed directions. Bad Legs, Bad Breasts, and Ulcer- ations of all kinds. The cure of ulcers has won for Holloway’s Ointwent an imperishable reputation, as this healing Oiutment will restore any case, however bad, to soundness. Many bad legs arise from nnprudencs, happening several years betore and alinost forgotien. If, then, there be any doubt as to the origin of the sores, the patient should read carefully what is Written on secondary symptoms in the Book of Di- rections, as those sores hever heal soundly until the system has undergone « thorough course of Hollo- way's purifying Pills. Coughs, Colds, Sore Throats, Dip- theria, and Bronchitis. Any of the above ailments may be quick!» cured if the Gintment be well and effectnally rubbed into the neck and chest twice a day, leaving the parts constantly covered with a rag spread with the pre peration ; if this treatment be adopted promptly, ia 8ix hours it will effectually stop the most alarming eymptoms. It must be evident that an outward application applied to the seat of the disorder mutt be more etlectual than any that ewan be taken by the méuth. Holloway’s Pills should be used according to the -tirections in order w subdue irritation, in- flainmution or fever, DROPSY. This fearful disease often makes its appearance between the ayes of forty and fifty, and might gene- rally be prevented by attending regularly to the proper action of the liver and stomach: these or #uns, at this Gane of life, have a great tendency to derangements, when asthma, dropsy, or disease of the heart ofien sets in. The blood requires fregneut elimination which no other medicines can so eflectu ally perform as these purifying Pills, as they purge gently, and act immedia ely upon the liver and sto mach, and thus remove all vbstractions which at the turning point of life always occur. This dan Kerous period should be closely watched ; two doses a week of about six Pills will ward of all dangerous diseases. But in all cases ofdropsy the Onitwent is a wonderful and sovereign remedy, and mast be effectunlly rabbed twice a day into the sufferings parts. , ° . Youthful Indiseretion. How many poor women snffer from the indisere tion of hushands—which result in bad legs, swellings, loss of health, and rheumatisin—ua they suppose—nithongh it is nething of the kind—but the effect of a certain divease taking hold of the system—no ordinary medicine can cure them, be- cuuse the disease has sunk deeply intu their conrti- tution. Childrén often have sores, and bad heads, which do not beal, for the reason that contamina ‘ion oecurred before their birth. Let all who may suffer from such causes have recourse to the puri- fying and healing properties ef these wonderful Ointment and Pills, observing carefully what is said in the book of directions on Secondary eymp- toms, which, if strictly followed, will etlect any cure of the kind, but it will be a work of a lite time. Both Ointment and Pills should be used in the Bad Legs Bad Breasts Burns Bunions Bite of Mosche-|Elephantiasis following disorders :— Corns (Soft) | Rheumatiem Cancers | Sealds Contracted and | Sore Nipples Stuff Joints | Sore-thronte Skin-diseases toes and Sand] Fistulas Seurvy Plies Gout /Sore-heade Coco. bay Giandular Swel- Tumours Chiego-foot lings | Uleers Chilblains ;|Lunbago | Wounds Chapped Hands | Piles | Yaws Sold at the Establishment of PROFESSOR HOLLOWAY, 244, Strand, (near Temple Bar,) Loxpon; also by all respectable Draggixts and Dealersin Medicines throughout the civilized world, at the following prices :—1s 1jd, 2s 9d, 4s 6d, 11s, 228, and 33s exch Pot. *,” There is a considerable saving by taking the rger sizes. N. B. Directions for the guidance of patients ia every disorder are affixed to ench Pot, and cau be had in any language, even in Clinese. 7 Charlottetown, December 21, 1869 i Se ane Os, CRN * ~ ne SI EON I PF My