‘ almost} befure hia comyulsivus were at an end | cys ee ——————— ———— —— —— Shased it of a peasant. Others, too, bave, We oan oaly prey that the resourees of the oun $4 per lb.; matebes, $3 75 per TO88 ; black succeeded in appropriating borses, jewellery, try way now be drawn wpoa promptly and freely | pepper, $3, sole leather, English belting, $2 25 and furniture of priceless value. The bro-| t meet the peng ewergenes. It exvoot be| to $2 50 per lb.; Ladies’ drab congress guiters, thers Mott have proved » great number of si-| Y8t ® nation ike this lacks the moans or the skill) $5, Blucher boots, $11 26 to S11 90 per parr ; miler misdeeds, the overnment were obliged, ‘9 Cope with aay emergency upon the water,-- Liverpool table sult, $54 for 20 lbs; Turks Ie — atill logs with one so utterly weak aud contemp-, land salt, $18 per bushel, &c., &e. to institute ao inguiry, which has resulted in tible ; I ; ible a8 We now bave tu deal with ft ov') Numerous other articles are quoted at establishing the complicity of several officials. 2 : . vs j strength be put forththen. It there is a fast sem) 0) en oug prices Une named Dymuntonsy, 4 diatrict judge, | going steamer to be found in any port, let ber be) c nominated by the goveroment, le the Most jarmed and sent outs if there is difficulty ms to| compromised. This maa wae in the babit of | terms o: sale or charter, let her be seized, that| journeying from village to village, exciting | she tay be at work pending the oupetntions tor | the peasants agaiuat their laadlords, aud pro-|paywent. That weak point of our regularly built | x atte them piuader with impunity , on } Men-of-war, speod, aun easily be wade up tor trou | oe Geopatch pings eft rg ern the commandant of Dunabourg, formerly | the merchant warive, and there sleo the wep can | NE S VbleceEmIs nes mes set t this wor redily f-| and throwing sheil ea ie Warsaw, sont on- | ane - Oly’ lot the an a a tel Federal troops within entrenchments and will diere and Cossacks ostensibly ta protect the!” = i a “ ; : make bold atagd jacdiorde, but ia. eatity ts encourage the /Cniy thi direction Ue fury tried, and ae at Langatroe’s corpe passed through Noskolnski against them aud those whom | the pluuderers which are now making havuc with | Hagerstown, Vriday, towards papeurene. they supposed to become insurgents. In the} ove of vur gust important interests Hill's corps preceded them. Lee alsu passe district of Rundaay two respectable citizens, | Ee — j through. — - ‘inet Joba Casimy Kulakowsko, were seized and| Figur ayy Conriacxation at Cuanieston Mouker's army ere Prot ‘eam ie bound eo tightly to cach other that the blood); —The N. Y. Herald has o letter from the! C — of bats Fucked qeatthe capture, burot her epirted from their fingeraails. Mr. |gnatius| blockading fleet of Charleston which says: | ah peal armament, &e., to Sebr. Archer Sobanski, vf the same district, in spite al his| “© On the afternoon of the 12th inst., the Eotered Portland Harbor on Friday night, intend- age, met oe re His aged rebei batteries ow Morris [sland apened fire! ing to burn onal. & a. oe there aon parcet was came Same Manner to t ) F | night she boarded the cutter, put crew into iru tortress of Dunabourg after winning 4 bs gy Aachen. hea tae Past gee es a to sen, followed by cae the! an hour no notice was taken of the firing by | : + , rs Forest City and destruction of his aad othur property. Foe) our forces. Presentiy the gunboats aa Plane gon w ecm ct chee. y what de the Poles euffer this unheard-of se-| bor 7 4 'and Gov. MeDonogh steamed up to within a ational cratte supposed to be on the verity? The werda of the Goyernor Ugolia | good range of the rebel batteries, and Poe e| ig fisatical crafts cuppe . will best anewer the question. Everything, ’| deadly tire from their heavy guns. The Naor, June 29th. said he, ‘depends upon yourselyes. | | & Cogmy Gre from the J6& Banaor, June : Petition | Union batterieson Folly [sland now opened | a ei : the Emperet, and you will be free. Say to) their fire, and for ‘aon hanes shot a aan ae. Se re iinet of command and him that you aro not Poles, and that you do| few thick and fast. We cvuld see that most} Gen Meade succeeds bin. wot wish to be, and you will he reatored to: of the rebel shot fe!l short, while those from | Herald's special despatch trom Harrisburg says the enjoyment of perfect security.’ ”’ | our batteries and guuboats burst in the midst | enemy have 20,000 at Carlisle with 43 pieces of Ow the 15th of May Padlewski was shat at! of the rebel batteries. l artillery, Plock. A few days before his execution he! {he firing lasted until sunset, but the re-| he firing heard yesterday was the skirmish at was taken before Gen. Someky, and is said to/ cult af the engagement is not fully known. | the outposts. et tiawe received the most splendid offers of ad-| The rebela were seen carrying off a number; Enemy's advanee is within 4 miles; they have vencement in the Russian army if he would of killed and wounded. During the | burned the bridges on Northern and ¢ entral Rail- wetura to the insurgents aad prevail on them | firing the rebel rams came out from he. | road between Harrisburg aud York on their way éo lay down their arms. Padlewski replied | hind Sumpter and proceeded down about two ” awa head-auarters Army of Potomac vhat his previous lite did nat justify the ‘us | miles from that fort, where they remained| cups oldie Unger Potends: are quiet, enewy sians in making such a proposal to him, and | yngil the engagement was over, not daring to) jaye sinall torce south of Hagerstown, oad Fed- moreover that the General made & great mie |p, \o part in the fight. The same night the) erals remaip in possession of South Mountain. take if he thought any one chief possessed the | whole roadstead and shipping were brilliantly! Three brigades of Coufederate evaalry reported power of staying the inauryection, which ex-| jjj}uminated for several hours by an extensive | moving towards Washington branch ot the Balti- isted in all parts of Poland, and would go on conflagration raging in Charleston. The} more and Ohio Railroad, passing within 14 miles increasing until the country waa liberated.! peayens were lighted up for miles around, | of Washington, He aaded that if ho were set free he would | and the dostruction of property in the doomed | ivel it his ae een bis eee at city must have been very heavy. once, and aak ien. Semeka whether if) sient Moscow were in arms aggigst the Tartars he; fjJow Sarina Vessets Run iro Repez| federates hold a position in front and are threat- should not behaye as he (Padlewski) had Pogrs.—It may puzzle most persons to know | eviug to cross the Susquehanna. behaved in Poland. The General's reply, of how the blockade is wo frequently run, evyen| _ Skirmishinng was going on ull day yesterday, j ‘te } 7 t J a aod General Couch, (Federal) has called tor three a wee eves. After Padlowski had by sailing vessela, with & many steamers on | thousand men, to w ork on Harrisbur y detences. been comdeywned to death his sentence was the watch at the entrance of the blockaded | ~ It ig hellinend that Geek Loa wae (Con- kept profound seczes, aud a report was even | ports. The thing is simple enough, and i8| federate) has o rened cubenatiantlies with Gen spread that he was not to be ahot, it being gase principally by a good share of what} oral Ewell at ‘Carliele, consequently a heavy teared (aa is alleged) that the inaurgents Pantoc called“ audacity, audacity, and) movement on Harrisburg is expected. would attack the town of Mock and endea- | audacity.’’ A moonless night is waited for.) A body of Federal cavalry bas retaken Get- vour toliberate him. Lloweyer, at 4 o'clock (f the stars are obscured by clouds so much tysburg, and the Federal army is gradually moving on the morniug of the Lith, he was brought the better. If the night is stormy, better! in that direction. out for execution. He had taken the Sacra-! yet. ‘The yesss] intended to run the block.) N° 4ppreheusion is felt for the Baltimore and ment some days ie it had been ar- ade is painted lead colour, so that in the! re eet ' ranged at hi particular requeat that he | dark she canp . sa : wes the efences of Baltimore are yery strong. — should nat have hia eyes camtaled. He stood ee ae : means Sees aed | Phe Coutederate pickets are reported as having ——— ~ —_ —— BY TELEGRAPIHI. BANGOR, June 29tb. Sr. Joun, N. B.,, June 30, : : : appeared withi y | ’ Ale , Vuir-j ,- facing the soldiera on the edge of his grave, | boldly heads towards the blockading squadron | ee Sele vee ! Liberal party to be retailed in thousands. fax road, aod, uatil the last moment, smoked a cigar. the vessels comprising which are rather more | es forward mavement is represented as He said 4a he took up his position that it was) likely not to have steam up than to have it. | being brilliant, the enemy retreating on Tulla- sad to die at twenty-seven, but that bis death | Perhaps the watch is sleepy, and the blockade | hams. would not be in vasa. The osder to fire was) runner is not discovered till she is close by, | given, and Padiewski reosived twelve bullet?) when her audacity causes her to be taken for | m the logs aud lower pars of the body. Ava transport or sume other vessel connected | soldior was sent forward to despateh him, and) with the squadron. Perhaps some vague, picion seizes on the watch, and the alarm | f ; he was thrown inta the yaye and the earth | is given. All hands are called to quarters ; | to relieve Baltimore of all present fear. ee shovelled aver him. Pa lewski, like Langie- but what then? 'f'wo or three guns are fired | ae raiders have fled traia the vicinity wioa, Beutkowski, and so many of the chiefs) wide of their mark, and the blockade breaker | “ R: wenngien. see : who have distinguished themselves in the jg out of harm's way before her range can be | ice Wocdauah tok fee " pen aaaeaene Polish insurrection, belonging to one of the pot, the persons on board laughing heartily! General Lee w on ed urn ‘arli scientific branches of his profession, and ze was supposed to be at Carlisle on St. Joun, N. B., July Ist. Martial law has been declared at Baltimore. Baltimore American says that General Meade on assuming command of the army of the Pote- mac issued orders for a movement of the army, Despateh dated Fort Washington, West Bank | | of Susquehanna, lust evening, says that the Con-| «The -Graminer. — = Charlottetown, July 6th, 1863. EDUCATION—THE VISITOR'S REPORT. Tue School Visitor's Report for 1862 has at A ——— still stronger testimony to the advantages and well deserved popularity of the Free Education Scheme. We must make room for the following extract, though et the risk of devoting too much space to this subject :— « In this Island twelve years ago, Education was but a feeble and sickly plant, receiving little length beev publisbed in the Royal Gazette, a8 the | attention from the people on’. and still less | law requires it should; aud from o caretul peru- anl of it we are now enabled to judge why the Government party were so dissatisfied with it ‘when it was presented to the House of Assembly | Inst Sessiou, and why they indiguantly ordered jthat it should net be printed in the Journals of | the House, in which documents of the kind are invariably and very properly preserved. The Re- port is, jydeed, miserably deticigat as regards the supply of information touching one of the most important jaterests of the Colony—in fact, there lack of excuses fu its absence. It is not, how- ever, the want of details which displeased the Tory party; but it is the contrast which the Visitor has drawn between the state of Edu- cation under the old Tory regiwe prior to 1851 and that uuder the Free System inaugurated by Mr. Coles, with the hearty support of the whole Liberal party, in 1852. Let us first notice Mr. Arbuckle’s excuses for! not performing his duty. He informs us that during the summer of 1862 much of his “ valuable time” was devoted to the selection of candidates for Scholarships in the Princes of Wales College, and that be was conse- quently prevented trom visiting schools. We sre well aware that Mr. Arbuckle had something to do in the selection ot scholarship candidates, but the little he had to do consisted in examining a few rough country buys at Suinmerside, Gearge- touwa aud Charlottetown, devoting to the service only # small portion of one day in each place. His next excuse is, that ip the early part of the winter of 1862, the roads were very bad, and he had to discontinue hia “ visitations for a time.” We do not remember that at the beginning of the winter of 1362 the roads were worse than in for- mer years,— but when the cold weather was pretty well advanced the roads got worse, and then we had the general election ; aud who, then, was more indefatigable in tramping over rough roads and smashing waggons than the School Visitor, who could not, for the life of him, visit a | thing else besides school visitiug—Orange Lodges | were to be organized and falsehoods against the Instead vf attending to the duties for which he was paid two hundred pounds a year, he went gabbling through the Seotch Settlements—grinning, gigg- ling, smoking his black pipe, loafing for provender for elt and horse, and paying for the same in stale and silly jokee. He told the fools who lis- 1688—and how the Catholics were going to des- troy their liberty and religion, and perhaps cut their throats same fine mourning before they were aroused from their slumbers; bat he never once : es of : at the manner in which they have ‘done Sunday night last. besides his commission in the Russian army » the d d Yankees.’ Jo thismanner large} Geveral Logan has reduced important work of heid a Professarship at the Military Acade- steainers have been known to successfully run | Vicksburg, and turned his guns on the enemy. | my of St. Petersburg. He was at War-| the blockade and to arrive here with cargoes! Large Confederate army under Generals Breck- | saw tho ni ht of the forced recruiting, of cotton. Witness the steamer from Char-| ¢ridge and Magruder, reported in Bank's rear at | followed the fugitives to the woods, and took | Jegton itself on the very eve of an attack on. Port Hudson, apparently to surround him indent the oe ot i oes ae band of in-| the fortifiestions at that place, as mentioned | oe. 1 fi | surgents taat was formed. lin my former letter } several Bragg’s army reported retreating from : | Tullahoma and Chattanvoga. " a —_ Sea a ey ae ing invasi THE CIVIL WAR IN THE STATES | Searctary Wella hes ondesed towe hail dozen! of Kentucky. Marshal! about attempting invasion | . SFA ES. | cunbuats and several other crafts after the rebel | : wivateers. ‘The names of the gunboats ar on, | SOUTHERN ACCOUNT OF THE BATTLE) with their rates of spent in ts Maw Veoh pupeve | $ OF WINCHESTER | Phey range from eight ta twelve knots, and as! Stanton, Va., (Jane 18th) Oorres. of the Richmond | mere than a week has passed since the rebel pri-| ~ niente mt Despateh . | Vateers were heard of eat they run sateen oc! CORRESPONDENCE . “<7 . . : i 8 Several days ago I cauld have wricten you quite | seventeen knots, we may infer that the chase will | ~wwr~wnrrw ee en RRR Bu luteresting commuvication, had [ beew willing | be a long one. But perhaps the Scerstary, in| te receive half the stories brought to tnis place | OTdering qut the fleet, hoped for such a result ea i OAT ah eae, 1.00. Gold about 146. Yo THe Eprror or THE EXAMINER. : a! Drag Sir ;— fresn the lower valley. I preterred to wait for betell when the tortoise and hare ryn 4 TROO.—"| eles in the Readias 2 last Saturd | sack detaila aa could be relied on. I have this } Chicago Times. sf ye Bene dantie. es niet ais nak aoe uywatianed how the Dutch hero of the “revolution,” who had no more regard for Seotehinen than he had for dogs, slaughtered in cold blood the very ancestars of the peaple who were asked to vegard him a8 a sgint and a saviour af their religion! | Mr. Arbuckle's sulary, like Mr. Pape’s, depended upon a general excitemeut of religious prejudices —that excitement could ouly be kept up by a roads tened to him about the “ glorious revolution” of from the Legislature. The sunshine of publie favor imparted tu it bo invigorating warmth It waa watered hy no copious showers fro the eneral revenue. The fruit it yielded was not Seficient in quantity, but indifferent in quality. Now how changed! That which was then feeble and sickly has become a strong and flourishing knowledge extend over the whole country. Under the fostering care of successive Governments, | assisted by the generous efforts of all classes in the community, it bas struck its routs deep inte a cultivated soil. From the ing of the Free School Act, the growth of ‘ducation has been very sutistactory; the results of the past year is no detailed information at all; but there is no convince me that the present system is eminently ular. ‘Che people everywhere, tho’ not reaping the saute & is calculated to confer, are anxious that it should be maintained; nor need we be surprised ut the universality of this desire. By the maintenance of the Free Education Act, the avenues of knowledge are thrown open to all without distinction of class or creed. Through the liberality of ite provisions the children of the poor and the sona of the wealthy, are placed upon an equal footing. children the elements of a good English education can do so ‘without money and with out price.’ year round.” A School Visitor's Report which contains such pleasing to that party—it is the truth uttered by overthrow of the Free System. Act. district in which he lives. public school a month before? When the election | him in office; and his retention in the public was approaching, Mr. Arbuckle thought of some-| service cau oaly be accounted for from the fact that he has been, and may be again, serviceable to the ruling party in forming Orange Lodges and creating religious strife. won ——-»g@poe——_ cently published, on the subjectof Orangeisin, the following extraordinary disclaimer of an intolerent spirit vo the part of the Orangemen :— “If it can be proved that Orangewen are as- sociated fur the purpose of attacking their Catho- lic neighbors, we shall unhesitatingly lend our assistance to put down Orangeism. We are aware that Orangemen allege that they are not associated for any such purpose—that their as- sociation has for its object the maintenance of their own rights, without in the slightest degree inter- fering with or attacking their Catholic neighbors.” There can be no doubt that Mr. -Pope, the writer of the above, rests his ease on a mere | quibble. He evidently puts a construction on the Those who wish to give their Flourishing schools are within their reach all the testimony as this to the advantages of one of the great measures of the Liberal Party may be an opponent ; and it fully explains the pettishness with which the Report was ordered to be excluded from the Assembly Journals at the very time when the Government were preparing for the But it cannot be said to be a satisfactory Report, inasmuch as it affords no statistical and detailed inturmation so necessary to show the working of the School It is merely an essay on the state of Education in P. E. Island, which any clever school bey could write in two or three hours, if he had never moved a hundred yards from the But as the performance of a well-paid official, whose duty it is to give full and accurate information respecting the character aud condition ot every district school in the Island, it is not ereditable to the Government who keep We copy from an article in the Islander of Friday last, in reply to Mr. Lawson’s letter, re- en en eee ———— — ———— CONFEDERATE PRIVATERRING —It hag —- ‘men’s property a8 the exemplary Christian who | . \ become wetical cution; but be bee = in the double capacity | currently repurted fet eurerit! days : ai ing/| ot be Council Board in t pacity y $8, that one towards the conclusion of his report m bearing od ‘ a ch ie miata Wa ting c to privatwcte that teen os ¢ fur the public service if the two Clerks were given | Riehwond Bay, neat to Milpeque shots, Hater: vver altogether to incessant prayer oud pola- for the American fishetwen, frértt Maing * singing. It wight be an entertaining sight, indeed, Massachusetts, several of whom, Ls ih 804, bayg to sew avd bear those babes of grace practising | been captured and destroyed. It it wh ttt all im- the Doxology in the Council Chamber after probable, séving how mdactowsly tho Ptivatony “their Hovora” left the Board. But suppose Taconey pursued the Yankee fehettren almont ty there were Treasury Warrants to fill up, end |the entrance of Boston berborr, and aetually other important business to be done, who knows | entering Portlend berbour, where what inconvenieace would result te individuals, | damage wre dome by her. Some of ou Soteby perhaps to the community at large, if Mr. Currie | talk largely # the House of Assembly abvut ony delayed his work and became as great a saint as handful of Votetecrs revisting mer awion: inv ty Mr. Pope, linked continually arm-in-arm with |event of a war With the United States. Why, tree, wbuee branches laden with the fruits of| (055. Ministers, indulging in beatific visions of | such a dare-devil as the Faconcy would sweep the “that undiscovered country from whose blissful | shores of this Island, ent tenigh at the Volont bourne” dishonest land agents, impostora, bypo- | before tifty of them could Se got toyetiier to fags rites and Bank swindlers are righteously excluded. | the foe ; and resistance ever With the whole jong For these reasons we think it advisable that Donald | of the fifteen bussdred would not only inethect al should not be too religives, a Ja Pope—it is far | but Judierous in the absence of const defences better for him to practise his gld iniquities, in a a — iy moderate way; — let him confine the practice to alll Joun eee ae Kay, F¢itr ang cages ie ente Manna Proprietor of the St. lulu Morning Telegraph, the Council Board let him these ain, a ’ hes been on a visit to this Leland for I days PeRNEPeA agrtictiog. — ee as va lately. In Mr. Livingston's paper there hayg’ exhibition “ Gop vr a ao ~, | been several excellent articles on our local affairs, it will preserve in the minds of the bely Council. |. nich the eiemestenmeen etna : lors a vivid recollection of the enormity of sin. wesinenas or yg anys init y by the As the ancient Spartans impressed upon the vainde , ae yy y Conepend, of their children the vice of intemperance by The ae aa ceupeneanl inaiat ectting their slaves drunk, eo may cur Spastans a On tien in their attacks upon the tide keep one slave at least to warn them agaist the onl te 7 oti all persons of doubtful or bad practice of less opeuaptie siete, tation r rulers cannot bear to ha + His Excellency’s servant, the jumor Clerk, bas mes 7 FF iticised feurleady ond ve their shown bis innate propensity for falsehood by in- ae ae ls - impartially timating—first—that we have questioned his right ow ar i s to * discuss the proceedings ofthe Roman Catholic)! ,z,an ar St. DUNSTAN’S COLLEGE. —We Bishop” with reapect to the appointment of |hey to remind our readers of the Bazaar to be Priests ; second—be has insinuated that we have | held at St. Dunstan's College on Wednesday und attacked Protestantism ; and third—that we are | Phuraday next. We have every reason to believe “very angry” with him “ for having criticised the | that it will be the most brilliant affair of the hing Bishop's appointments.” With regard to the first: | which ever eceurred on the Island. We are re- we did not question his right to publish any quested to state that an admission fee of nine- pensense ; but we laughed at the bad taste, folly pence will be taken at the gate, se as to preveat and impertineuce which prampted hin to write | 4 rush of disorderly boys. . about things that he does not understand, which <nesosnlearienlgailitaatiiaiainh do not concern him or the general public in the; THe Great Easvexs ‘Tes MEETING, adver least degree, avy more than it concerns us to know | tised in our culumus, is worthy of the consideration whether our friend Donald consumes as much |f those who can manage to go te it. Nothing porridge every worning as he did on the banks of | Can be more certain than a warm-bearted recep- the West River, and whether bis apothecary's | tion from the bay Fortune people, by whom the bill for sulphur is now as high as it was then. — | Entertainment is to be prepared, and equally Aa to the second allegation against us, we beg to | Certain is it that it will be such aa entertainment assure Donald that we are under no “ delusion” — | 8% Will afford the greatest satisfaction to all who we never attacked any form of Protestantiem, | #9 participate in it. either directly or indirectly. Apart from the un- charitableness and folly of such a proceeding, we have hundreds ofattacbed and valuable friends and supporters in every section of the Protestant Church, whose feelings and opinions we shall always sincerely respect; we have certainly laughed at the bigots and hypocrites whenever they have come in our way, and we expect to do so as long as we live, without abating one jot of our profound regard for honest, conscientious Protestantism.—With respect to the third state- eee ———9ibe— te" Ovr triend Ross, of the “ Weebly,” isan enterprising fellow. We observe that be bas eun- the past week, the promised Semi-Weekly Adver- tiser, which is, to a great extent, a reprint of his other paper. We like to see our brother journa. lists, even though they sometimes differ irom us, get along in the world; and brother Ross may be sure that he has our best wishes for his continued success, siderably enlarged the Weekly, and issued, during | possess the qualities necessary to excite anger in others; with all his tom-foolery, nonsense, gaggery, aud coneeit, he is not a bad fellow at bottem—that is, he is not a malicious dog—he won't bite, though he may grow] sometimes; and he requires only a little patting on the back, as we give him occasionally, to make him perfectly word “ attacking which the whole history of) gcile. Anger isa thing we don’t know much about, | Orangeism will not justify. Attacks may bemade | by ‘unjust criticism, by eslumny and abuse, as | Flour Market—$4.16 » $5. Extra $5.60 ga | *)s8tematic course of lying; and Mr. Arbuckle) well ag by force and physical violence. Orange- portunities otisred. If they do not resort to but we believe ’tis not pleasant; and we are sure that nothing is so well calculated to keep us a stranger to it as an intimate acquaintance with | felt a zeal for that sort of work, which he never! men have not hesitated to make attacks of both| our friend Donald; for the strut, the airs, the | allowed to yield to inclement weather or bad| kinds on their Catholic neighbors, whenever op-| j,,n,easurable conceit and twaddle by which he is | distinguished can never fail te excite emotions Let us, however, seo what he saye about the! physical force iu this Island, it is because they j),, very opposite of anger. “| state of education in this Colovy before the Free | fear they might be rather roughly handled by their | As a proof of our friend's conceit, we may just | System was established. He refers to a period opponents—they are conscious they are not yet) i otice that, according to his belief, nine-tenths of ranging from twenty-five to fifteen years ago, when | strang enough for a personal encounter, and they | 114 Jrish Catholics of Charlottetown look upon ment, that we are “ very angry” with Donald, we beg he will not think so. The junior Clerk does not morning conversed with a gentleman who was, with the army during the late important transac- | tion, and who left Winchester Tuesday morning, | ~~ Should Hooker be deteated dicisively in the im and I will give you a few items derived from hia, | ),,, | delphia mustsuceumb, temporarily, to the invader, | ing tu see its columns well filled with the usual | t the shock would arouse the apathetic millions | 6rd/liant articles from the pens of ite much-admired | evening When “ Dauvid’s” “ devil” entered and laid the Protestant on the table, my curiosity was nding battle, Washington, Baltimore and Phila. | exeited to take up that evangelical sheet, expect- the ald Family Compact ruled the roast, and when, are well assured that rvuffianism of the true | jin as their champion aud deferder, with regard as we were often told, the people enjoyed every | Orange stamp would find no protection or en-| 4, the episcopal administration of this diocese, blessing and advantage they could desire. Mr.) couragement from the Couris of law in the) yrite we and his Lordship the Bishop, together Arbuckle says “those were days of comparative | Island, however much it might be winked at) with all the Scoteh priests in the Island, are the Our glorious Ewell—uader whom | served during | ; : : ; : | in amoment, Success or deteat will alike prove last we ant Se —— sean disastrous in the end to Lee — Banger Times. has indeed caught the mantle of the ascended) Rather a doubtful source of consolation that ! and highly gifted editor and his staff of logical and | supremely woral-toved correspondents. Aiter his satamie majesty of the Protestant | office had taken his departure, seeing that none | darkness aud ignorance,” and ‘schools were ‘few | and far between.’ In many cases old log buildings, which had become useless fur other purposes, Jackeon. Brilliautly has he re-enacted the | acenes of the Spring of 62, on the vame thea-| tre. Having first occupied every road approach: | ing Winehester, Jacksou-like, he made a road, leaving the valley turn-pike near Kernstown, and stretching across the Romney read, and for six | miles furtbee on, bearing toward the Martinsburg | road. By weans of this road he led his army halt | way round the town, and attacked the enemy, | who were expecting an attack from forces on the | Martinsburg road on the flank and rear. The surprise was complete. So little were they anti- cing, an attack from the direction in which it that they had placed there all the waggon trains, which thus actually were between ue and them. It seems that skirmishing all around was going on during Saturday, the enemy's pickets retiring. It also continued Sanday, and on that day Ewell, with great secresy and with painful toil, conducted his army over the new road, get- ting them into position about 6 P. M., when the eannonade commenced. It continued for two and a half hours, during which the Louisiana Brigade gallantly charged, with cheers, the enemy's outer works, and took sssion of them. Here dark- ness closed active operations, but on Mouday morning the enemy, utterly disorganized, evacu- ated the town, leaving horses, wagons, commissary and medical atores and artillery. They seemed | to have destroyed nothing. Some three or four) lundred wagons were secured, also sixty pieces | of eannon, and 2800 horses, among which a large nurober were unusually fine avimals. Three miles abeve the town, a brigade en masse was captured, prinerpally, 1 beheve, by the immortal * Stonewall Brigade”. Besides this, during to- day large numbers of prisoners, in squads, were veing brought jn. The avenues of exit from the were strewn with the knapsacks ard cloth- wg of the fugitives, It wae feared the brute Milroy had escaped, but if so, it was after the style iu which his master Lincoln entered Wash- ington. Our whole loss in killed and wounded does not exceed two hundred. Of course we lost none in prisoners. The enemy's loss in killed and wounded wus comparatively small, but we appear | to have captured nearly the whole force, amount- ing to 6000 or 7000. Probably at least as many | muskets as prisouers were taken. Is not all “e a noble achievement for our maimed Ewell? Right glad am L[ that be rides as of old. From this place and from everywhere else, refugees | from the iower valley are flocking thither. Mer-| chants and speculators, male and female, Jew and | Gentile, are alse crowding to Winchester. But it will be no go, as there are few if any goods there. 1 learn that the town is in a filthy condi- tion. As you know, a slaughter house had been established in the centre of the place. The mar-| ket and some of the principal buildings have been | used as stables. The Yan have been the prio- cipal sufferers from the “ chotted fever,” though » kind of typhoid fever had prevailed among the citizens. 1 wes pleased to hear that the country thi« side of Winchester is less desolated than last yeas. Many fences are up, enclosing luxuriant rass or corn or wheat. The season there has o better than in thi# region. [| learn that on ‘Suecaday morning our sciny was three miles below Martinsburg, ordered to warcb at 1 o'clock, with | tices days’ rations. aE Tre Tacoxy.—Some of the American papers are gettiag furiens over the movements of this little eratt. Ibe Boston Advertiser says :— “Tbe de predations of the privateer Tacony are perbape tee savst humiliating experience that the war kas brought upon us. Of the tour or five hundred ve aa our navy list, there is probably not cae which could not easily sink this wretched warsuder, Esew the sailing cratt chartered the othey day would each be an over-match for her; but upbappily cur nary are scattered ovey thou- sands of miles of eagat blockade or collected io soutberDwatees, me 9 per nd is busy with our fishermen of Cape Cod, apparently securing wopuaity by the very eoseness of his approach to the seats of our maritiaw strength. Perhaps, however, it may be an maezaracy to term him a planderer, foc plunder does at seem to be the great purpose of one who dies at no higher game than Cape Cod fishiug smacks. Jasult avd geve- ral injury to commeree seem rather to be his object. And who shall say taat be does not gain! braudy, Champagne, $70, brandy, T. F. Brisson them, seeing that hia one yun can almost be heard from our shore, and considering the uneasy state | claret wine, $50 to 55 per doz FROM THE SOUTH. A gentleman of this city has furnished us with a copy of the Daily Journal, published at Wilmington, North Uarolina. It is dated dune Sth, and was brought in a vessel which Jately ** ran the blockade.’’ In reference to the ** banishment’’ of Vallandigham to the South, the Jowrna? says :— Hon. C. L. Vallandigham, of Ohio, haviog been arrested, tried and condemned by mili- tary authority, was marooned—thrust forth, exiled by the head of the usurping power, Abraham Lincoln. He was sent to the Coa-| federate lines under a flag of truce from! Rosecrans, about as great a ruffian as the Lincolnite service contains, and that is saying a great deal. Tt seems that our authorities refused to re- ceive any flag of truce for any such purpose, and so the honorable gentleman was dropped between the lines like u foundling deserted by his unnataral parent. Rather than that buspitality and common humapity should be violated, Mr. Vallandigham was allowed to enter our lines, as an unfortunate, appealing toa brave and generous people, pot as a convict coming under Lincoln's Mag of truce. It is thus, we suppose, that he now stands and wishes to be understood as standing to- wards the Confederacy. Lie is with us, but not of us, among us in person, but absent in spirit. Soften the matter as we may, his position is a falseone. Give Mr. Vallandig- ham all the credit we may, we yet think that his continued residence among us would be an error and even worse. it would hardly be fair to press too far upon the hospitality and generosity of a people and a government whose right to separate existence he as a citizen of w country at war with us, denies and opposes. It would hardly be prudent or, right for Mr. Vallandigham to take up any | lengthened residence at the South, when he | bas the world before him where to choose. | Having once allowed him inside the Confed- | erate lines, neither tue people nor the authori- | ties of the Confederacy, nor of any State of it, would seek to expel him, or otherwise control his movements, unless by some action of hie own he reuders & resort to such a course | necessary, and we have uo idea that Mr. V.) will be guilty of anything not honorable and | | becoming. No one can refuse their admiration to a man who has stood up, as Mr. Vallandigham has done, against the vulgar tyranny ot the present Federal administration, nor withhold | their sympathy from a man suffering in such | a cause with manly firmness. But our ad-' | miration tuo freely shown would injure him, | aud oar warmest sympathies find too many, objects at home to permit them to expend) themselves upon merely speculative objects | abroad. In other times the suggestion of the| press that as a matter of propriety, Mr. Val-| landigham should take up his abode for the time being in some foreign land, would sound ehuclish and inhospitable, now it is liable to no such reproach,”’ The Journal also contains a ‘* catalogue of imported goods sold at auctivn, on Friday, 29tu May, 1863, at Wilmington, N. C.,”’ from which we make the following selec- tions :— * Blacking, $14 50 per gross ; French window glass, $75 per box; corn brooms, $22 to $27 50, painted pails, $27 per dozen: corn $3 35 per bus. ; white ziuc paint, $i 274, Printer’s ink, $250 per tb., mackerel, 47 to 50 per §it; pine apple cheese, $5, extract logwoud, $2 to $3 per ib. crown champagne, $205 per case; Geneva gin, $97 50 to $Y1, brandy, Martell, $145, brandy, Hennesy, $115, brandy, Vieux Cognac, $1V0, of the gentlemen of the Room appeared to be particularly anxious to read the lucubrations of | low in the ceiling, and badly ventilated, these were | direction during the last two or three years. Fle Messrs. David Laird & Co., I approached the paper cautiously, and, observing that it was yet moist, carefully unfolded it on the table, thinking | were converted into schoal-houses, If they were | causidered trivial defects, at a time when health | | and comfart were things of secondary impartance. by the Government officials. As fur aitacks upon Catholies in the way of calumny, surely it ia not | necessary to remind the public that the Orange | Secretary has laboured most zealously in that has indulged in the foulest,filthiest ribaldry against his Catholic neighbore—he has seattered blas- most implacable enemies of the Irish Catholics. Donald is big with importance at the bare con- ception of having created a disunion between the Scoteh and Irish Catholics. It would bea pity to disturb a “ delusion” 86 absurd and harmless, if it affords any gratification to its possessor. It shews, further, how impossible it is to indulge in that there must be something very repulsive! ...---Many & precious afternoon,” he says, ‘did | phemies against the Catholic religion broadcast _ any thing else than laughter at Donald's vagaries. within when no person would venture to open it. But (mirabile dictu!) 1 found, upen turning to! the secular department, that it contained ply a | few lines of original matter; and on looking back | and we may be sure that there was a great quan-| rites as the offspring of hellish invention. He bas to the columns that are sanctified by being spe- cially devoted to heavenly things, and whic formerly teemed with the ungrammatical lamen- tations of that holy mau—the Reetor of St. Paul’s —J observed that they were filled with nothing save @ Teport of the very interesting proceedings of the “ Reverend Court.” Upon leaving the Room, I was informed that the barrenness of the last few numbers of the Protestant is attributable to the fact of its editor having received a “call,” not from the regions of bliss, but from a quarter that produces a far more potent effect on the man’s constitution, from very many of his subscribers, asking him to exclude from his columns the vile aud immoral productions of the two clerks ot the Executive Council, and promising him that “in default thereof,” their regard for domestic morality would leave thei no alternative but to withdraw their support from his paper. This is the second time that Mr. Laird has been thus highly favored with 2 moye of the spirit; but on this occasion it has had the effect of not only excluding bie usual correspon- dents, but also of producing a temporary suppres- sion of the poor man’s mental faculties. This prostration of his hitherto extraordinary powers of unnd, hastened, as it has been, by the severe caatigation administered to him a few weeks since by tae Examiner, has affected his whole system to such an alarming degree that his friends enter- tain very feeble hopes of his restoration to that wonted gentleness of spirit, so characteristic of him; and bis medical attendants advise his speedy removal to some more genial climate. I have been iuformed, by excellent authority, that a few months age, when the Colonial Secre- tary was outraging every principle of human decency, by publishing the vilest, most obscene and filthy slanders against Catholic ladies, ever invented by the depraved imagination of fallen man, that one ot the very few intelligent, respectable Protestants of Belfast called on Mr. Laird and asked bom did he iutend to allow “W. H. Pope” to make the columns of the Pro- testant the medium of cerrupting the whole population of that district—it being the only place ou the Island likely to be at all affeeted by the immoral ravings of Pope—and at the sane time informed him, that if any more such immoral communications should appear in the Protestant, he would be onder the necessity of returaing the paper. Itis reported that about the same time the female coinpositors in the office, to their credit be it said, absolutely refused to set up the cou- munications of the Colonial Seeretary, containing the gross aud unfounded reflections on the cha- racter of their sex belonging to the Catholic Church ; and the manager of the office gave Mr. Laird distinetly to understand, that he, as a map ot honor, could not continue to be connected witb so infumous a sheet. On that occasion, I believe that Mr. Laird was forced to apply at the Islander office for some assistants, in order to enable him to issue his paper regularly. But now that his compositors retuse, it report is correct, to print his scurrilous articles, and his subscribers refuse to read them, he bas no alternative but either to exclude the effusions of the Council Clerks trom his columns or stop the paper entirely. Some of his religious friends, knowing that by reason of his extreme length, he is not at all adapted for setting type, and seeing that be is formed by nature to occupy a very high position in the Church, I think that it is quite probable he will decide upon the latter alternative, Hoping that the clouds of intolerance that at present quvsepe poor “ Dauvid's” tertile brain, may svon be dissipated, that he may be induced this werld, and turn bie atteution towards the “ cure of souls,” knowing that from his knowledge ot human uature he would be the means of pre- venting some of the grey ees of the Government & Son, $62 to $137 per ease; port wine S91, flock from straying from the path of rectitude ; eu; whisky in| and sincerely wishing that his exesedingly modest «ft suspense into which every commercial citizen | hhds. $25, coguac brandy, pale, $33, do. dark,, assistant who exercises his extremities by going is now thrown | | $39, dark Martell, $39, demijolns pure Holland * It ws not worth while now to consider by what | gia, $36, Jamaica rum, $27 per gallon; Congou fault or neglect we Lave been exposed to this hu-| ten, $410, Young Hayson tea, $655, Linpevial tea, suiliating attack on our very const, at the moment | 35 25, = } $2 35 to $1 95 per bb.; orn farina, Be when three or tour formidable cruisers wate for indian ¢ wus sbips um the great pathways of the ocean. | superior pule soap, $1 19, star candies, $3 75 to! geuts, Rio coffee, $3 60, through the Polka in the Council offiee with a three legged stool for his partner, may not inflict ‘upon himself any bodily injuries that would tend to mar the beauty of his stately limbs, I remain, yours, &e. June 29, 1863, TYRO. to sever his connection with the secular affairs of | ‘they [the school children] idle away in ness to stop up the many openings in the wall;” | tity of fuel required to keep the school-houses warm in winter. Mr. Arbuckle says the school houses were then built in the forest, so that fire- wood could be easily had, and he informs us that | when the boys were sent out to bring it in, they “managed to combine a good deal of fun with very little work.” They were sensible boys, and) we are not surprised to learn that they were nearly | as good as their masters in other respects. There is a proverbial saying applied to strolling vagabonds who do no geod for themselves or society, that ‘a rolling stone gathers no moss.” It is some relief to the gloomy picture of the “days of comparative darkness and ignorance” to | know that the School boys “ idled” away their tine to some purpose, while the Tory officials droned out their lives in dignified contempt for the moss-covered school-houses in the forest. Speak- ing of the schoolmasters of those daye, Mr. Ar- buckle says :— “The qualifications of the school-masters gene- rally were more a name than a reality. Many of those who followed the ill-remunerated occu- pation were little superior in attainments ta the unlucky flock committed to their care. What little they did kuow, or thought they knew, was so wretchedly communicated, that it searvely de- served the name of education. Reading was taught so mechanically that it would positively be painful to listen te the monetonous and lifeless enunciation of the most adyanced scholars. A1- alysis of lessons, no matter whether they were | difficult or easy, was not even attempted, children read their books as if they were written in ap unknown tongue. ‘The contents of each successive volume were invulved in impenetrable mystery, which the schoolmaster did not attempt to remove. To the pupils nothing could be more distasteful than books. Nor need we be surprised that it was ao! The esuse of it was the master’s slovenl method of teaching, and not the children’s negli- gence or stupidity! The study of that popular and pleasing branch of educationo—Geography— was wholly unknown, A map was a sight upon which the most advanced scholar never set his eyes. Indeed, oe was supposed to be so abstruse a subject that University Professors alone were competent to deal with it. English was taught, or supposed to be taught, in eome districts ; but only a very few even of those who had spent three or four years in a Grammar class ever inastered the elementary principles of the science. , charlatan knows right well that he owes his as idolatrous and damnable, and its most sacred brutishly and cowardly assailed the virtue of Cathohe women; and yet this precious pivk has now the immpudence to say that he is ready to put down Orangeism “ if it can be found that Orange- men are associated for the purpose of attacking their Catholic neighbours.” This impudent present position not to his talents, moral influence, and integrity, but,to his incessant calumoious and blasphemous attacks upon his Catholic neighbours, in which he is supported by other kuaves who live on the credulity of the public, and is backed by a constituency with very many of whom, we believe, decent Hottentots or Kamtschatkans would not care to associate. He says that the Orange association “ has for its ubject the maintenance of their own rights,” namely, the rights of Orangemen. From this we infer that Catholics bave invaded, or threatened the rights of Protestants in this community. Will the Orange Secretary shew when and where the invasion has been attempted or the threat pro- nouneed 7 kind. He kuows that Catholics have been always in the minority in both branches of the Legislature, and wust always be sa, so long as the number of Protestants preponderate, which it is likely to do forever, Jndoed, if theré were a majority of Catholics in the Island, and a large majority too, we doubt very much if they would send s majority of Catholic representatives to Parliament, for heretofore it has been the practice for Districts that could easily elyet Catholics to choose Liberal Protestants for their members—thus shewing 4 disposition to sink the question of religion in the choice of representatives, But suppose, even, that the two branches of the Legislature were crammed with Catholics, they could enact no law jnjurious to the interests of Protestants while thie Colony remaine under the British Crown. This the Colonial Secretary very well understnds ; but he raises the how! about Protestant rights being in danger tv jjapose upon the ignorant, when nothing is in danger but his own salary, for which he gives no value, and which he would certainly and They committed the rules of syntax to memery, They knew how many parts of speech there were, but could never tell the case of a noun or pronoun without a guess or two. The memory was culti- vated, but the understanding was wholly neglected. Arithmetic, too, was studied, but in thick mental darkness.” From this flattering picture of the state of education under the old Tory rule, we turn to Mr. Arbuckle’s account of its progress from 1852, when Mr. Coles’s Education Bill became the law of theland, Speaking of that measure, the School Visitor says :— “ Since the introduction of that measure, the number of the schools has been more than doubled, while that of the children receiving instruction has increased three fold.” And further on he says,in the same paragraph :— “The amount and character of instruction im- parted in our District Schools since the passing of the Free Education Act in 1852, are beyond , comparison superior to what they were previously. Reading, English Grammar, Geography, Arith- metic, &c., are now taught in a manner which makes these studies protitable as well as attrac- tive to the young.” and could readily conjugate the verb “to love.” | speedily lose by a change of Government, ~~ “THE most delightful religious services wit- | | neased in avy country or in any age "(see Monitor) | by which this blessed ‘uwn was glorified during the past week, don’t appear to have enlarged the stock of piety, or improved the morals and temper of at least one of the Government officials, We) allude to Mr. Donald Currie, third Clerk of the | Executive Council. He has fibbed eggregiously in the last Monitor—that doesy’t show that * the delightful religious services” have had a bene- ficial effect upon his mind; and he has become so inflated with cunceit—a prominent trait in Dou- ald’s character always—as to leave no 100m for a particle of humility—a good old virtue without which genuine Christianity cannot exist, as Donald, no doubt, learned in his obscure days. We are not surprised to perceive that the junior Clerk retains his old vices in an aggravated form, seeing that the Head Clerk, W. H. Pope, has be- come transcendently pious, which can only be ac- counted for by his having grabbed other people’s The Schvol Visitor was not satisfied with these| igre, as well ag his own, of ‘the delightful high testimonials to the enlightened and generous | religious services ;”” and we allknow that no person policy of the Liberal Party in the matterof Edu-; is 60 deeply skilled in the art of grabbing other gathering through the country; he has denounced that religion | We thank Mr. Dundas and the Council for keep- ing him in the pablic service,—we would’nt have him dismissed on any account; we are content to wink at his propensity to fibbing if he wiil only continue to make such a thorough fool of himself by bragging of his achievements, and intimating that he has any influence over any class in the community. In olden times great lords and po- tentates used to keep fuols about their Courts for their amusement,—for economy's sake, we sup- pose, the Drudge and the Fool are united in the same individual at the august Court of George Dundas, Esqr. The character of Drudge js ad- mirably sustained — there is a trifling defect in that of Fool. The Fool of feudal times had wit and humour—the want of beth in our Fool con- stitutes his only claim to consideration under this head. hrm aia aasity GOVERNMENT INTERFERENCE WITH THE REVENUE LAW. We have been informad that the Government have taken upon themselves to make an important alteration m the collection of duties such as is not authorised by the Revenue Act. It is this: the lated at six shillings in the dollar; but as the American dollar bill is only worth four shillings and sixpence here at present, the Government have agreed to admit goods at that valuation— thus making a reduction of 25 percent in favor of the importer, which the law does not authorise. It may seem fair enough in one way, because the importer gains nothing by the depreciation of the | ; American currency, for the price is raised upon his goods ; but it is certainly not fair to the im- porters who were compelled to pay their duties, since the first of May, at the rate of six shillings in the dollar. They will have an undoubted claim to a remission of 25 per cent. on the duties levied on their American goods. The Government should bave provided for this contingency before the Revenue Bili was passed, for at the time it was under the consideration of the Legislature, the American paper currency was in the same depreciated con- dition that it is at present. It is a dangerous and arbitrary proceeding of the Government to alter the plain letter of the law ; besides, as in a case of this kind, it might lead to enormous abuses; as, for example, duties on Colonial merehandize are caleylated in dollars as well as on merchandize from the States. Now, stippose 8 merchant shipped from New Brunswick into Maine a cer- tain quantity of expensive goods, and brought them from the latter State into thie Island at 25 per cent redaction, it is likely he would make 3 handsome thing by the operation, We have not time to make full enquiries into the subject. We drawing public gttention to it, Shei d ceciserte * Doctors are said to differ, so do Queen's Counsels. Mr. Lawson cannot see in the allusion to the Lieytenant Governor, contained in the anti-orange petition, “any reflection” upon His Excellency. OMe. tteusiey, Queen's Counsel, it oe b will protest net man, although willing to against a which he knew his constituents were opposed, positively refused, as we have been informed, to sign the Bishup’s petition, ynjeas the personal re- flection upon the Lieutegant Governor should be | firet remoyed from it.”— , July 3. | ‘The above statement is not true. Mr. Hensley | did sign the petition contaming the passage “ jp | allusion to the Lieutenant Governor.’’—Ep. Ex’r. ; ‘ merely give this short notice for the purpose of pear, saw differently, The latter cr. 2 o——__— A late New York paper says :—Amongst recent visitors to our city we had the pleasure of seeing last week, the Hon. Daniel Brennan, of Chariotte- town, Prince Edward Island, well known to many of our readers as an honest and patriotic public man. We believe it is the intention of Mr. Brennan and his party to visit Moutreal and the other Canadian eities, after a short stay at Saratoga. oneal Nail, nati PUBLIC MEETING RESPECTING THE PROPOSED SALE OF THE BARRACK SQUARE. At a Public Meeting of the citizens of Charlet- tetown, held agreeable tv requisition on Monday, the 29th of June last, tor the purpose of taking into consideration the necessity of petitioning Her Majesty the Queen to withheld her assent te the Act to authorise the sale of the Barracks in Char- lottetowa, passed at the last session of the Colonial Porbenen ie, Wotan the Mayor was ealled to Shair, meoting Was Very nv Upon the motion of Rebert Hutchinson, Esq., seconded by Mr. Johu Gates, it was Resolved, ‘That it is the opinion of this meeting that the sale of the Barracks and the land apper- taining thereto, as contemplated by the Act in the last session of the General Assembly, en- titled “An Act to authorise the Government to sell the Military Barracks of Charlottetown,” would be highly detrimental and injurious to the present and future interests of the city. {Carried unanimously. } a Upen the motion of Benjamin Davies, Esq. seconded by Henry J. Cundall, Esq., it was Resolved, That with due submission to the Local Adwinistration, this meeting conceives that it has mistaken the purport of His Grace the Duke of Newcastle's tch, and that it is not the inten- tion of Her Majesty's Government to give to the Government of Prince Edward Island the right to vell the Barracks and land appertaining thereto. (Carried unanimously.) wer U the mvtion of William Heard, -» 80- evaded by Mr. Archibald MeNeill, it —_ Resolved, That in the opinion of thi i the best disposition of Rp Pasonehe ont Shettert would be to place them in the custody and care and telegraph in readiness.in case : to render it necessary to use it sonal cara purposes. [Carried unanimously.) Esg, se- _ pen he Be of Henry Haszard, by Mr. Jas. B. Pollard, it was Resolved, That a considerable portion of the site contem ohare of the Act belongs to the City of wo, viz: those of Dorchester, King's and Water Streets, now built upon and encksed with the Barrack fence, and the whole of Reebiort street from the Barrack gate to the shore of the Hille h; and further, that of the City reserved by the then G of en dy Prince Edward Island for military purposes the original plan of Charlottetown, is He knows he canvot do anything of the | gq palorem duties on American goode are calcu- | Rochfort street on the east and Sydney street on the north. U motion of Henry Palmer, Esq., seconded by Henry J. Calbeck, Esq., it was Resolved, That though the Barrack in i sent dilapi and dismantled an i defence to the cit hostilities, it ic nevertheless a means of i = 3 ees caeiee of John Lawson, Eaq., seconded by rt Hutchinson, Exsq., it was military Barracks of Charlottetown.” [Passed unanimously. } The Chairman having left the Chair, and the Hon. Geo. Coles called thereto, on motion of Robert Hutchinson, Exq., seconded by William Heard, Esq., that the of the meeting be given to His Worship the Mayor fr bis able conduct in the chair. the very handsome manner in which be bas come forward to protect the interests of the city in this important su . ———__ 44 oo SHOCKING AND FATAL AccipENT.—On Tues- day evening last, a little son of Mr. Paul Me- , carriage-builder, aged about three years, and named Albert Wesley, was instantly killed by the ae a cart-body whicb had been canted up on its side, The accident took place in the yard of Mr. McPhail, and was witnessed by the agonized mother. The poor little fellow was pisying about the oart-body, by climbing upon it in sliding down, his own weight w over upen him, ing his neck, and bursting all the blood-veesels of the head. was an in ing child, and bis sudden and terrible death is 3 sad blow to his afflicted parents.—X. Weekly. qranissomnenielippreinptatinen Bopy Fousp.—The bedy of Mr. Charles Hubbard, drowned some weeks since in Case @- pee Harbor, was found on Thureday last, and in- terredon Friday. We understand that Goon was recovered very near the place where © unfortunate man was observed te go down.—F. ‘ # Akin wt ial RONEN r- lps en EE C8 saber oteegagr ay