lian cn aaae lo ak aie PF Ve ger eR. Bo ET ON a ae Mags) a . ie Seat = et alma t A ES OEE OCU LATEST TRLEGRAPH DESPATCITBS TO and with their trusted leaders, who are two! THR EXAMINER OFFICE ot the most distinguished men of the age— ey sore members of Piolament wid aud assistance te the Rugligh people te ob- Uvtertnined to oppose Reform Bil ws cost vote, tain for them something like the contpently expecting majority ta Pachamenut of reform to which they have a just right. wounds, sprains, bruises, ewollen or stiff joints, is, : Gladstone and Brighi--the lrah people, speak.) Jobuses’# Anodyne Lij It Sr. Jenx, N. B., Apeil 8, 1867.-— London, ing thruugh their representatives, grve their | owe Nae wud i¢ the, work full m@asure ~ The best outward application kvown for flesh-. necticut consider it unsafe te-trust the bulletin} : inn rthe hands of their few negnes, who are of a) man the superior order in Pegard # intelligence aud | property qualifications, howmach more danger- ~~ | ous would the experiment bein South Caroli ‘where more than balf the pePulation are blacks, | nt. stands tfamily medi a, | CORRESPONDENCE, syainast Hill, thereby causing Derby's cabinet, And he believed that, aut only from tie pres- tv rewgn.—CGold 133}. jsere to whieh he tid referved, but also from Panis, 9.—Monstier, Secretary of State of the grautude to whieh bis own and bis ssev-! Foreign Affairs, haz wade u very conciliatory eles services had a strong claim, Lreland, | speeeh, which had the eifect greatiy to lessen without shed@ioy a drop of human bivod,-cty panie in Europe. withous Che sligttest injury, to @ buns Léxnes, 9 —Liketal party iy House of D&tM&: 8° ald receive an wuvlioration of ity Ouasaboen split on the inte Question. Is is cund:ti' a, und abeve and beyuud al}, that not thought Derby Goverument safe. |tumored whieh wanld give the peasantry of Treland | und belaeel ab Wachinsten thet Macinilion that to which they had a right and a ehaim | Thirty-ninth Congress has passed into history. | In the closing’ days of that Congress, the radi- cal majority succeeded in their cherished object of crushing out the last vestige ot liberty in the South. about the unconstitutionality of the Sherman has been captured. American Goverument ay hold on the land, and a secarity tor the Protesting @guinst the repetition ot ‘| acatecas | raits of their honest imdustry. (Cheers ) massacre and Miximilian’s being treated by He believed there was not on the fuce of the roles Of war.—2Gold 1354. " |eerth w more energetic, industrious or moral Sv. Jonx, April 11.—National pride of people than the peasantry of Ireland, and he Sr. te 4 .— Natienai : : ital : France deeply wounded. Wiid anti Prussina | womreeet A ee wer een as See Seelis eel, Be Mee eal humble, industrious, lowly Irish was not the % prevars. ; re | English Government, but those who breathea i#% military preparations, thas threatening | ; he vatddiy (a London Porta, ¢ at the same air but did not feel with the same Pan bes : *« Evtror Exanuixven— Military Bill—s measure which, in every one of its enacting clauses, sets at naught the plain letter of the constitution. and where the ignorant and degraded fielf hands UNITED @BTATES AFFAIRS, i bare little more intelligenre than the herses , P ’ getting seed and food enough to eat, while sowing that they drive. The truth is thatthe sadicals and planting it: and thus we should recrive more wish to perpetuate paver in their own hands ; | penerit id one year than isinow eflocted in fige {| and they are determined to exelude the Southérn | for T considet that it would be better, in pine cases | | ont of ten, to allow the roads to go unrepaired tha them only on such terms a3, they think will] to follow the old (and should be obsolete) practice deprive them of allfutare strengt h—believing, | a niehding theta with dry dust and sede, te the great annoyance and inconvenience of the travell- ing public thruugh the Whele of the succeeding 2nd Auditor's Office, Washingion, D. C., March 1, 1367. ce ie veople from repre: i ltogethe radmi Dear Sir ;— Since my last letter to you, the| —" Peenea ean or ota as they do, that they can always contre! the negro’ vote avainst their former masters. This is the sole seeret of their opposition to all liberal plans of reconstruction. : Finee my last letter fo fou, we’ have had some rare entertainmeats in the theatrical line. Of course, it is utterly vain to talk hard to admit of compression; and so the traveller idcompelled te go jolting over this apology for repairing til the fall rains set in, when it isall at once turned into a quagmire, and reodered im- Pin Qoure thas telad Edwin Forrest, the greatest American—pro- individually,) aud expended in that ‘the old Liberal party, those ealled middle men, and-at thst tine most certain to benefit | and also a portion of the Conservatives, It ‘them. Iwould recommend a very liberal grant| need not, therefore, surprise any one to find that | for the road servige this Spring—( this ean be done | many of those, who firmly hold to the principle, if our friends will fulfif the great Tory promise of| thar to the “ Victors belong the Spoil,” should j retrenchancut and the labour to be performed so feel disappointed on finding that some are kept avn a2 thiodiwat ie sifficiently wut of the ground, | 4, 4 others put in office who have hitherco been Lear give Ae people 90 opportunity of known as opponents of the Liberal party. But the fact that the supporters of the new Govern- went are composed of a portion ef three dif- ferent parties, will convinee any reasovable n| mind of the necessity of concessions on all sides, in order to the formation and strengthening of a party who, he hoped, after a fair trial, would give evidence not only of efficiency, but of a determination to do al) in their power for the ; for when Grst laid omit ie too dry aud) advancement of the best interests of the Colony. ARRIVAL OF THE ENGLISH MAIL. * —_—a Tux English mail, by the regular Cunard Steamer, arrived at Halifax on Thursday mom. ing last, and was received here Suturday night, via the Capes. We are im possession of dates to the 31st alt. The prmeipal and moet impor- tant items of news have been anticipated by the Atlantic cable despatches, as will appear from our Telegraphic news columns. it is currently reported at St. Petersburgh thet an aéliance, offensive and defensive, bas been coneladed be- tween Prussia and Russia, and thas Rowmewiea is @ party to the arrangement. The laters dates from Berlin confirm the aaaouncemest that Prussia has counselled the Sarkish Go- verumentto cede the Island of Candia io Greece, and it is stated that in so doing Prussia has acted jn unison with Russia, Franee and Austria. ify } A Hamburg paper publishes communication from Berlin which says, ; He regretied that the approaching Session of the Legislature was necessarily delayed to so late a period in the season, when gentlemen re- presenting the agricultural interests of the Co- “en en ee feelings, and who did not think with the same meseral contre uf Eurupe.—Gold 127. jminds. The great evil was that the British | Government bad not the courage to grapple ;with the Irish difficulty, to sey to thé Irish | landlords, you must do justice to these men —that was the difficulty ; tlat was the weak- jness of the British Government. If he had | the power himself, ke would make this clase bow down in i omage beture the great twnass ol St. Joms, N. B., Aprit 12th, 1467.—Prin cess of Wales at pointof death, Sarvical ope tiv vaon knee-boue necessary to save her lite. Cannot endure pain—too weak tu take chlo refurm. ... Berlin, 11th.—Bismarck demands Napoieo.'s reagou for urminz, responsible for consequences. Holds France Asks instant bably the greatest living—tragedian has just In his-fayourite Charles the First justified its proceedings by » . : finishe >-Heaveme or buldly declaring that it was a revolutionary | ished an engagement here. ; ; . | charac * Othei ‘ing Le tichilie court that utterly ignored the ancient consti- characters of Otheilo, King Lear, Richilieu, tution and lawa of the realm; and [ can really see no other way by which the radical party Jack Cade aud Damon i: the play of Damon and | Pythias, he is wnappwachable. In Jlamlet a es geal vi and Ric Shad ties oie nnn i can justify their course to their fellow. citizens and Richard the Third, there are many tha passable, propose to make and mend the reads in seed time!" Not quite so fast, wy dear sir. pose no euch a thing. week to ten days and longer m the spring, before seed tire, befure the land bas dried sufficiently I have no doubt but some will say, “Why, you I pro- There is always from a lony would be very desirous to be at their farms. That delay, however, could not be attributed to the new Government, out of whose power it was te call the Legislature any sooner. The proper time for the Session was the month of February, or, at the latest, March, that being a any arrangement effeeted between Franee andi Holland, with regard to Laxenuburg, the other European Powers will also be entitled te-a voice in the matter.” In the Legislative bedy: of Paris the first article of the Bill for the abolition of imprisonment for debt wos passedl Gold 136;. Sr. Jou, Apvil 13.--Cable dk patch of Loadou, ilth, Says Grand Jury igaored in dictibent against keye. In House of Lords, Caf&dian tuiiway Bill passed tina . F like _— } ; cessafibn of warlike preparations. _ the industrious race to whom God had given that island. [fe would not destroy—he would | pot take away one shadow of right, but he| would take away the power of doing wrong. | The reigning star here now is| te do anything in the way of cultivation, when jt perfer Booth. season ofthe year when members of both or to the world. So far as I have seen, not one of them has attempted to vindicate the " constitutionality of the Sherman Bill. Their reading | (Cheers and eres of * Bravo."’) ‘Preat ce | denunciations of the veto Message are loud and to assail any of its positions—simply because sueggasfilly.. . . .Lron-clad war steamer left Liv-| frish people well and the country~would| fierce; but not one of theni has yet ventured erpool: supposed for Cadiz, relative to un-| bloom and prosper; treat them harshly, and| ; lawful Seizure of ship Tornady,. Gold 1264.) in epite of the beauty Goud hud given their! FROM COLONIAL EXCHANGES. nave been posted up in the streets boung. °-The Prussian Commander of the alone to pursue, wnd they would despise him B opteess of Luxembourg has compluiaed of the if for the purpose of catehing their momentary insult offered to his government. meee he a eee wes ‘ad what re a : . ; did not honestly leve. e had not said. e ee as poate one word there that he would not bunestly woke sinieyieaien ane 3 r edad, vindicate by his wets and policy in the aphere Woiterts part of this State, wad wind : Me in which his constitueuw had placed him. of Reaper scined. , ecto r wee my | Alluding to @ furthooru ing. work of his on} ine Stans natn ‘et a. = a the | himericn. Mr. Maguire continued, that a> an| ve Irishman, he was too deeply interested in) oi 2m menlesra Awerwa t have a thought prejudicial to its aN Ly April 4.—Two men.of-war are | people or institutions. Ler institutions he e od at Quebec aS SsuOn as Navigution | did not thorvughly understand, but her peo- opeds. The frigate Avrora, now stationed! ple he profoundly adwired, and the ‘eeling of theté, is ordered home.....A despatch from: Jove he entertained fur America was only se- Ouswa states that Lord Monck wi JdhE'nad retain until bis term has expired in return jt:| cond to that he had for the land of his birth. September. event letters fram Deleyates do hot Meslion wis will be his successor... .. Several ofthe French Antitcunfederate papers have wheeled round, and accept the new posi- ee wer confederation.....Au advance of 15 cents took place iv Sapertive Fi our to-day. —_- THE FENIANS EXCOMMUNICATED. From the Cork Examiner. The Right Kev. Dr. Morjarty has isaned the following cireular te the clergy of Kerry s— , Kevergnd Sir.—Hitherte many of the clergy of strong were made af 38.20 up to $5.-| deemed it wrvise to speak ot Fenianism from 5 still hizher rates for favorite brands. | their altars op wecount of 1t4 alust total absence ney Superfine also sold $4.10 to $8.174.| trom their parishes. Some considered that ©. $5.10 to $5.30. A brisk demand has} by deing so they would giveto the few mem- Sprétiy- ep for Pork. 300 barrels mess sold to | bers of this condemned society who might be in GF... Snialler tots sold at $20, and their midst an unmerited importance. ‘Though nek an ddvence.: All prin dete ufler-i ™* dv pot believe that the quospiracy is either hus been pu lowed at $14.50 to B15 j wide-spread or dangerous ig the rural districts, $00 bervels pri digas! leslie’ Ail yet the events which have recently occurreed in 4 : this county are so neterioug, that silence on the | 3. ne = « - Market or all descriptions of pork subject is ne longer advisable, even in those par. | wan tendency... . In pre- upward u isher which may be quost free from this moral pes- should have been stated that/tilepee. You will therefore intorm your flock ron hand was 75,582 bbls.) that all persons joining the Feviau society, whe- 554 same time last year. ther sworn or uvsworn, incur a Papal excommu- , rm, April 4—The Temperance hicatiog. Several constitutions denouncing this crowded last evening to its utmost extreme spiitual penalty ayainst the mewbers of secret societies had bern issued by Sovereign Pontiffe—by Clewent XH, Benedict XIY., Pius VEL, and Leo XH. Pius 1X, who nuw ve- cupies the Holy See, im allecution of the 25th September, 1865, confirming the aforesaid decree of his predecessors, proseribed and condemned, under the same penalty, all seeret societies which either openly or elandestinely conspire against the lawful authorities. The Holy See bad been previously consulted, with special reference to thePenian society, on the question—whether, to in- eur excommunication, it ts sufficient that the se! ciety should plot against the State alone oF against | the Cherch alone. Piua IX... consulted the Car- | dinals of the Congregation of the Inquisition ; and | @ letier of the Chrdimal Pretect of the Propagan- | da, dated june 7, 1564, addressed to the Arch- bishop of Dublin, conveys the answer of the Pope | in taese words :—* The seervt societies, of whieh | there is questiog in the Pontifical couatitutions, | are understood to be all such as propose to them. | selves cuything againat the Church or the Govern- | ment, whether they require an oath of aecresy or ty to reeeive How. Mr. Tilley wid present bia with yan Address from the eka The | or enthusiasm Was munifest-d.....The epageipieted Mr, Tilley on the sue. ae wion of the Delegaius.....Mr. Tilley | reply thanked the meetin, for their and weleome. He fully ex- d the “Finn fromy the Que bec scheme inancwl ang other advautages Hon, George Brown com- plaiwed that undue concession: had been made to the Maritime Provinces, but be paid Mr. Brown the complimeng of saying that he (Mr. Tj beheved, had"Mr. B. been one of the Confer. er. have been equally ibe cal,in order the general assent of the ped) le of New Brapswiek and Nova Seoti» might be secured. . - -p He spoke of the absence of al! opposition to the principles of the Bill in Parliament, and the iutecest Her Majesty the Queen had ex pressed ip the congulidation of her North Ame ricaii Colonies,.. . He stated the uaion woald probably be proclaimed in July and the Eleet- dongyin Angust.... There would be free trade io Provincia! Produce and Manufactures aa soci: ai Union was proclaimed. .... He intended te remajn in the local Government unless cho- sen lo represent his present or ancuher consti tueucy in Parliament.....Meeting concluded by givéday three rousing cheers for the Queen air theee for Mr. Tilley. in64. way have yielded tu the temptation, or who may | yet be tempted, may kuow that they have te chose | between Fentamsm and membership with the! Chureb of Christ. Should you have patent proof | that any person i8 propagating this accused xo- ciety in your parish, you will dewounce him by name as exeoumutiicated ; aad you will infiorwn | the people of the further eelfcts which, by the Canon Law, such denunciation carries with it. | en Sf. PATRICK'S DAY SPEECH At the dinner of the Knights of St. Patrick. given ie New York on Monday evening, the aedienee was treated to a speeeh from the member dur Cork, [reland, io the House ot Commons, very different from the Fenian nottaenge aod clup-trap usually dispenecd on GLLa SUL. first regular toast, ©The American Répubfic and its Cuiet Magistrate, the Presi- del Whe United States,” having received wll ¢) gueate—- A SENSIBLE ; uers of taking or keeping an aolawful oath, ma-| king the sacred name of God a bend of iniquity. | There are other considerations Which might he usetully suggested in connection witht yx Rubject ; but, fora faithial Catholic people, it shonid be enongh te know that they are bound to ghun Fe. nianism by their ebedience to the Catholje Chureh ; not merely by that obedience which they owe to their parieh priest, or to the bishop of the diveess, but by that which they owe to the Sove- reige Poutil, the sucewssor of St. Peter, Christ's Vicar on earth, They may bence understand bow deeply deworalizing, how calculated to pro- mote sebisys, and ultimately ty corrupt the puyty of faith, are those newspapers which spplend ned abet these muchimations 4f evil, and held up to public adtairation tome against whou the Chured | proneuuces her avathemas. | honors, the toast of Mur inyited ! we tender them ull knigatly hospi tafify.”* wae given. In announcing the toust the ident said 1t would be responded to by’ bile who bad claims votonly on lrishwen. but op humanity at large, ae a gentleman whe had written and spoken for the cause a! op humanity, charity and educatiwou— Mr, Jubn Frances Maguire. , bia on (he question of Confederation, was received Mr. Maguire, after thanking them for the) py telegraph from Sun Fraucisco at the office of distingutsled honor conferred on hin, suid be) oe porouty Globe: was surry to eay he had no claim oo them for * New Weta aC any distivetion, ashe had simply endeavoured, or iteoek oo is67 to the utmost of hie ability in the path he tae ~~ had chuscn, to do his duty tonestiy to hit country. Many persons imagined be did nut go far enough ; others on the comtrary mighe imagine he wept » good deal tov tar; but he wold assy wt least he had earnestly and strep y persevered in the poth he had chosen, sixi that in bis allegiance w his coun- try he had never faltered or never swerved. He, was pow about turning bie face home ->-s- - The following important intelligence, ae to the action of the Legislative Council of British Colum- “ Zditor Toronto Gluobe— “The Legislative Council unarimonsly voted to-day to apply for the admission of Britieli Coluim- bia into the Confederacy “A. Decosmus, “FJ. Bansaron, * Members.” The Globe remmarke:—*" This is a most interest- ing movement on the part of our fellow colonists ou the other side of the eautinent—and the firat You will explain on this oeeasion the cunse-| . : a quence of excomuunigation, se that those who! feeling out of his'natare as to refuse to transfer dinate officers of the ship of State, so that in time country with His own eternal band, it would: they are unassailable, They find it much easier | be miserable. They wanted reform, and he; to denounce President Johnson than to answer Bavssers, March 3{.—Placards hostile to | trusted they would have it. (cries of ** From) his arguments. i . : > 8 F y "9 + or } Prussia and favuring an alliance with France, | the Fenians,"*) He begged them to make) f Luxem-| *UOwanee tor his position. Ue had one course | And yet those very men who ropose to subject one-third of their country- men, for an indefinite length of time, to a des- potism more intolerable than that of the Sultan of Turkey, impddeatly prate about the danger to our republican institutions of the establish- ment of menarchical forms of government on our borders—as if @ constitutional monarchy, }or any form of monarchy, indeed, were not preferable to a military despotism, where there is wo law but the will of the commanding general—who may be utterly ignorant of both law and equity—and where even the poor pri. vilege of a trial by military commission is only I am so thoroughly disgusted with their fanaticism, despotism and hypocrisy combined that, although I live withia @ stone's throw of the capital, | have not yet felt an inclination to waste @ night in hearing granted at his discretion. the debates. The radicals allege that the civil law is dis- regarded in the Southern States; ‘and that the prevalence of crime there, and the chaotic state of society, justify <heir violation of the constitution by taking the municipel leyislation into their own hands. In vain their opponents confront them with the stern logic of facts and figures ; and bring forward statistics to shew that, in proportion to the respective populations, there have been, during the past year, five crimes committed in radical, puritanical Mas- Kachusetts to every one in Alabama, Georgia or Virginia—and some of those crimes of so monstrous and abominable a character, if committed soath of Mason and Dixon's line, would raise a universal howl of denunciation throughout the radical rauks. no mention of their intermeddling with the course of local legislation in Massachusetts, nor do we see any attempt to override her civil law with the military. Aud why this exemp- tion? Simply because she sends a full radical What care they for One crime com- delegation to Congress. crimes in Massachusetts ? mitted in the South is, for their purposes, worth a hundred committed in any northern state. If a hot-blooded and aristocratic south- ern youth has so far failed to overcome the prejudices of early education gs to refuse to Li . P vu . . r 4 2 . wot."—[See Evelesiaatical Record of October, recognise his late slave as an equal and a bro-| storm was brewing. her, or has so far failed to crush all human his affection from his comrades, who fought by his side on a hundred battle-fields, to his con- querors who desolated his fields and burnes his houses, this is considered, in the radical code of ethics, a much more henious offence than r office of public Censor—his duties to be spiritual the aforesaid ‘colored brother’’ should, as ij You will alse rewind your flock of the deep siuful-|@ late instance, enter the house of a lone and) defenceless white woman, and, after committing an unutterable outrage upon her person, cut her throat and rob her house. Even granting that the law of self-preserva. tion, which rises above all cunstitutioual re- straints and compacts, renders this course of legislation necessary at the present time, does not this very necessity demonstrate the fact that'a purely representative Government has proved a signal failure on this continent? Is it not heartless mockery to talk of the blessings of republican government to the millions waom we propose to deprive, for an indefinite length of time, of all civil and political rights? If de amost that can be said in favor of self-go- vernment is, that it is adapted to the birth-place of en Butler, though not to the birth-place of Washington, then, the sooner we substitute some other form of government for it the better. The xqdicals tell us, however, that this state of things shall be only temporary—that this furm of government shall only be imposed on the Souther States until they shall have ceased to wanifeas such intense hatred towards the Federal Government, and shall express ther readiness to agcept their own disfranchisement ward, after having spent vearly ax months in » tour thrvugh this gloria cowntry, which had been su splendidly taken possession of ‘by the [rish race—(laughter) — and he! waa again going to renew bis earnest, bumble labors, and he trusted that, aided dy other meo who bad assuctated with ham. they might be crowned with some beneficial resulis. He was, like their chairman, pot inclined to des- | —_ He wae not disheartened, but wee, SAvVAGes IN Mexicu.—Cummenting on the Hed with hope; and although there had| fecett massacre of one hundred and filty French been frequent disappointment, an) that hope | Siders in Mexico by order of the liberal leader had tied delayed in its tulfiiment (rom year | ee en hie aed tok that he oo : , ekecule @ oretgnuers taken Wi arms in er t year, eull he most exrnestly a mt | panda, the New York Times uses this forcible ouly in the wisdom and relrnee of his coun-| lauguane:~—"The bhudy muster whe wrdered try wen, Got only in the repentenor of their! thie cowardly butehury, afew ordered a grand legislators, but io the powers of the public) ball in honor of the event; he invited eue hun- will tu achieve something like justice tor a peo-| dred and fifty of the chief ladies of the place, ple who had been so Jong demed their full) and was surprised to find but fifteen preseut, share of the free satitutiens belonging to the Whether he ordered the remaining one hundred coumtry-te which they are attached. As he | und thirty-five to be exectted or not we are wild. Gow ahout to leuve. tho country, he might net intormed. Nothing more inhuman, more sndvige in thing like a propirecy. Lie | Utterly infamous than this has occurred within p aye , the hetory of modern ware, It brands with would indulge jp nyo exaggerativa, because be |; i wae edvanced t jele the season «! his youth ineflacenbie disgrace the black hearted monster who ordered it, the Presideut of Mexico whe ; aad with a larger experience he) ine te have given it bis countentsnee, and ‘We form gomethong like 4 rauunal! the republican cause whieh both profess to af the pressnt time and of the! serve, Lt is impossible for Christians, or for wen future. He believed thot—and he of humane instinets to sympathize with a eause weed repent it in the of Commons, be- | whieh pee such ae of - plainest eaded there was nothing he would say here priveiples af recognized and benureble wariare. he Would nut: cu edhe ~—and | Jur goverment owes to itself, xed to the public: bt ar aus. where COU ine ‘eae ne sentiment of the civilized world to piel in would eay there whieh he would Epes veuture, vhost ww vay here (Oheers.) He would avy he be-} : ee I, hs Brnnef Sastan hpoug!t ts bear) When the urine is thick, turbid, deficient in @ Brition Psrliament and ‘he British | quautity, or voided with difficulty trow all ube rue. by the Trish race on tions uf the kideeys, bladder or urinary orgaus, tie, would bring prompt give Sheridan's Cavalry Condition Powders, tae dat rh cad poe) step we trust, towards the opening up of a route w the Pacific on lritish giverican soil.” fl ail al The giarantee af the British Government hae heen seeured for the building of the Lutercolouial Railroad; and the Bill fer the Confederation of the Briteh North American Provinces bas receiv- ed the Royal assent. eo — wee this side uf the A attention to the gle ips ot Tre * ’ & conviction jn thers was nv rebel Leeds BRoNeHiaL ie tee aia | jeal Director of General Hoepiial, eae . eae | Bpiracks, near St. Louia, March 8, 1862. wae portion g! the Eng-| “Messrs. Joho 1. Rrowo & Son, Boston, Mans, high ip ihiees (trial and | ™ at your Jar-tamed and must servieeuble ¥ pr #* tee * Trochés* ia being ad: in the poxpital of whieh wh hat arta 9 Englaod. | haba chdrge, and with very beurficial aud de Me ide ¢ iw allying Bronchig) ieeitation.” ad most wisely, 1Oge-| eided ‘y tachment of a pedple to their gove-nment will any pedple will hecome better qualified to ex. ercise the rights of freemeg by their being first reduced to the condition of abject slaves. humiliating terms propoged, to eseape a threatened coufiscation of their property, their submission would be that of ‘terror- stricken slaves to their ergel and imperious masters, and uot the voluntary submission of freemen to the benignant rule of a just and liberal Goverranent. It js equally plain that the radicals are not animaged by their love | of negro suffrage as an active motive principle ; te obtain a little eeed and food neceseary for the | for they have rejected it thegelves by OVEr- coming spring. whelniing majorities in thoag pydical states in which the question has been recently submitted | advocate running the Island ju debt, in order to ; to the people, .Aceording 40 jhe standard of buy bread and aed fot the people. Ob, not | Servative party, agaiust whom he had fought blican | gove t they eve prescribed | It is possible, and even probable that such a course. (politically) for the past 25 years, on their having for the south, there is not a northern state but will be necessary before harvest, but at present refrained from instituting any factious opposi- and the univergy| enfranchisement of their late slaves, as the govereign remedy for all their political diseases. In the Sherman Bill aniver- sal suffrage is mage a condition precedent to the admiasion of any Southern State into the Union—without which none of them shall be recognized as possessing a republican form of government. Now, it requires but } ttle acu- men to pereeive that the majority in Congress is not actuated in their course towards the South by @ desire either for the renovation of its white population or the elevation of the blacks. Obtuse as many of their intellects are, there ia not one of them so ignorant of all the teachings of history && to believe that ‘the at- increase I proportion as it tramples on their rights and extinguishes thir liberties, or that Even if the Southern pecple would accept the Yet, we hear! John Brougham, the celebrated Irish comedian, who figures as an‘author as well as an actor, I had the plea- sure lately of hearing, for the first time in. my and writes his own comedies. life, the sublime oratorio of Messiah performed with a full chorus, It was a treat fora life- time. I have never had such complete enjoy- ment, however, since [ came to Washington as during two nights that T was hearing the celebrated Scotch vocalist, Kennedy, Accord- ing as he changed from the humorous to the pathetic, he kept his audiesce—especially the Scotch portion thereof—coatinually alternating between laughter and tears. Oh! the incom. parable beauty of thuse old Scotch songs, when sung by a master. An intelligent P. EB. Islander writes to me, urging me to give your readers some incidents of my soldier life, and assuring me that such reminiscences will be mach more entertaining to them than my disquisitions on American polities. Ayreeably to his request, I shall drop politics for a time, and give your readers a series of sketehes of my experience as a soliier, beginning with one incident that I shall always reyard as one of the most interesting episodes in my eventful life. I follow his arlvice the more readily that I find I cannot now express my real political sentiments without giving of- fence to old and tried friend, A near and dear relative, writing té me fromthe west, implored’ me to recousider the subjegs carefully before I commit myseif te such “ awful intidglity,”’ M. cnt Rehan sg [Fok THE EXAMINER] —_— Under the editorial motte of “ Our God, our | Country and our Queen,” we have in the Patriot lot the 6tb inst. the keeond edition vf comments jon * the spoils,” or Government appointments to office. The aditorial staff of the Patriot appear to be well * posted,” a least to their own satisfaction, in the different reasous actuating the Government in their present ard future appointments. As so mich talk has been occasioned, and so uiany rumors ufloat concerning the appointments and the numerous applicants for office, would it not be expedient for the Government, in the interest of * Our Country and our Queen,” and for the benefit of these persona who, like the dog in the) munger, not having the bone themselves, are jealous of their neighbour possessing it—to create The editer of the Patriot would wake an excellent Clerk of the Weather, or Politieal Astrologer. seine Hew offices for their special benefit? is just in the right state or condition to repair the called “a slack spell,” when poor men are waiting men should have an opportunity of repairing Lie highways; and by so doing prepare seed for their order to assist the destitute fortheith, 1 ain positive that hundreds of acres Will go uuseeded this spring and care less about the condition of the country as farfetched and overdrawn. From his lofty eruinenee he could sean the poli- tieal horizon, end predict from whieh quarter the | He might also be required | to establich a code of signale to warn the subor- | lof danger every man might be at his post. The | wub of the Patriot having, as rumor has it, at-one time studied ior the Chureh, but finding he was | j Heat ** the right man in the right place,” afterwards j abandoned it~—might be induced to accept the He should have the power to re- | commend, a8 the recipients of Government pa- thomage, such persons as are strictly orthodex iv | faith and political merality. Kut badinage apart, what is the object of all the cayilling wade by the Patriot at the Govern- went appoiutments? Does the Patriot expect that the Government will consult their wishes, or the desires pf the Conservative party. No doubt numerous applications have been made for offices —more than juve been at any former administra- tion of the Liberal party, but the Patriot should know that the Liberals have gained considerable accessions from the Conservative ranks, and the old greed of office seeking has net forsaken the newcomers ; aud begel would remark, en passant, that the system of receiving applications for offices in the gift of the Goygrnment is a bad one, inas- much as it encourages a set of political weather- cocks who are ever ready a8 eccasion way require to support the winning party. The Government kuew their friends and supporters, and have § good directory in the poll books; and by adopting the system of dis- countenancing office seeking would give greater The Liberal party and their organs never complaiggd, when iu opposition, of their adhereuta being turped out of office, and the office-holders under the fast. Liberal adminis- tration accepted the adversy vote as the fortune of war and decree of the fates, and gave up their offices, without a murwur. It is absurd for persons whe have made thein- selves obnoxious to a party to expect to be retained ia office hy that party,—they whould aceept “ the situation,” and stand or fall with their friends ; ‘tis true the Liberal chiefs did retain, during the first four years they were in power, persons opposed to them, but they met with the reward narrated in the fable of the an who harbored a viper in his bosom, and caeried it home to his igmily. We trust they have profited by the mera. Yours, A LIBERAL. | and temporal. satisfaction to all parties. Ch’town, April 8th, 1867. iM =_- FOR THE EXAMINER. —— Dear Mr. Editor, Through the falsehood and double degling of my enemies, and the treachery of some of my friends (save the mark.), Tam not in the position to spesk and act as ] would like in bebalf pf the destitute people around ine, and for the good pf the Island in general; but the eonfidenee’ I hage in my friends, ({ tnean the victorious Liberals,) who lof all right thinking persons. }seutative.aud their determinajion. to re-elect have been more fortunate, or perhaps unfortunate, than myseli—prompts me to say a word throygh you to them in behalf of the people whose repre- sentatives may not be aware of the state of the country. 1 think I am eafe in asserting that there are hundreds in thiadistrict, (and I presume } ; ; ther most popolar members from pF 1 5 ‘end Lipide the 7, , Breland, assvcrated with the English peuple, | Bar Geuabe wid 4 Treches give provpt i. the wet, the weevil, the rust, aud the rot, have that this is not the only part of the Island where rendered the people destitute,) without the ol Now, sir, perhaps you think that I aim going to Massachusetts that has a republican form of Lonly want the public means husbanded, (as I tion ta his return. He said the new Govern. government to-day. If the people of Con-' should like “to see the people tusband their! ment was composed of three parties, namely, addressed those assembled in front of the City Hall. of the new Government, touching appointments and dismissals; alluded to the impossibjlity of | giving satisfaction to all parties, relative to those changes consequent upon the advent of a new administration, He had nodoubt, howeyer, tjrat general satisfaction would result from the | course adopted by the Government! in regard | tg those matters. He complimented the Con- reads with, when there ia what is commenly tor the land todry up. ‘This 1a the time that such land. Jf something of the sort is wot done, in in King’s County alone. ‘The above may appear to those who kaow little It is indeed gloomy, but wevertheless true, See to it then, you with Whow rests Lhe respoos.bility. : Yours truly, : . CHARLES CLAY. Dundas, King’s County, 2 26th March, 1867. 4 Che Oxaminer, Charlottetown, April 15, 1867. a ai -_ —_—-— -— THE PARTIAL ELECTIONS, THE nomination of Candidates in the districts wherein vacancies have occurred by the accep- tance of oflice by four members of the House of Assembly, took place"on Wednesday fast. The Hon. Mr. Coles, the Provincial Secretary, was nominated for re-election in his old district by David Lawson, Esqr., and seconded by Ewen MeMillan,. Esyr. Mr. John Ross, of the Weekly, was also nominated in opposition to the Col, Secretary. His proposerwasa Mr. Wood, Lot 48—the name of the seconder we did not hear. My, Ross is prompted to his in- sane course by a contemptible factivas spirit, in which he is encouraged by some opponents of the Goverament and by disappuiuted candi- dates for office like himself. He is very well aware that he has not the ghost of a chance of being elected. | Indeed he hus declared that he would offer if he could only get two votes. Now, although every one knows that Mr. Ross will suffer a disgraceful defeat—if the displea- sure of the outraged electors be not more harsh- ly visited upon him — still his mischievous and infamous opposition will have the effect of keeping Mr. Coles out of his seat for ten days after the meeting of the House, fer the law is such that he cannot be declared elected» sooner than ten days after the poll: | ing day. Mr. Coles, being the Leader of the Government, is the member on whom should devolve the introduction of Government measures, and their guidance through the House of Assembiy, If theee should necessa- rily be delayed, and the business of the country retarded, at great inconvenience to the whole community—to Mr. Ttoss will belong the merit of accomplishing this most unpatriotic object. Mr. Ross, thoroughly destitute of talent and influence, has always been rezarded as a nobody in this’ commanity, but his miserably factions opposition to the popular Colonial Secretary covers him with ineffable’ disgrace in the eyes At the nomination in Georgetown for the First District of King's County, the Hon. Mr. Attorney General Hensley was re-elected with- out opposition, and will be able to take his seat in the House on Thursday next. He was pro- posed by Mr. Daniel H. Dingwell, and seconded by Daniel Flyan, Esg.—F or the Second District, Mr. Whelan, the Queea’s Priater, Was proposed by Mr. Daniel Sinnott, and seconded by Mr. Donald MeDonald, Lot 56. Anthony Me- Cormack, Esqr., was proposed by Johu A. McLaine, and seconded by Mr, Edward Flynn. W. H. McEwen, Esqr., was proposed by Mr, Harry Muoney, and seconded by Mr, Wm, JL. Douglas. Edward Reilly, Bsqr., was proposed hy John McIntyre, Esqr., and seconded by Mr. David Lewis, We have the strongest reasons for believing that Messrs. Whelan and MeCor- mark will win this election, Indéed, there would not be the shadow of a doudt about the matter if the Catholic electors, who are the majority of the voters, were not subjected to unseen influences that cannot be easily met and overcome. We contidently hope, however, that the result of the election will be favourable to the progress of Liberal principles, and that the district—now somewhat distracted and con- fused—will again be happily restored to its It is more than fikely we shall havé occasion to say something further rormal condition. about this election in a subsequent number. Owx Wednesday last the Hon. George Coles was nominated to fill the vacancy in the Third District of Queen's County, caused by his ac. ceptance of the oilice of Colonial Secretary. The almost impassable state of the roads alone prevented many of the electyrs from attending on Nomination day, to give expression to their approval of the course pursued by their Repre- him to his seat. _Hewever, none of the lead- ing men of the district were present, among them David Lawson, Esqr, who proposed, and Ewen MeMillan, Esqr, who seconded, the nomination of the Hon, Mr. Coles, both of whom made a few appropriate remarks. Hon. Mr. Coles, having been duly nominated, He gave a concise review of the actions branches of the Legislature could best afford to leave their homes. He alluded to the expendi- ture of the past year exceeding ten thousand pounds over what appeared at the end of the financial year—the heavy public works which had been coutracted for, but not yet complete, and, but partly paid for—the purchase of the Cunard Estate—all of which would cripple the resourves at the Colony for sume time. He spoke of the necesity of placing the Educational departinent of the Colony on its former foot- ing, and of increasing the salaries of teachers. He also touched upon the desirability of pro- curing a loan, in order to relieve the resources ofthe Colony, Reforms of an important natare could not, however, be reasonably expected during the first and necessarily short Session of the uew House. He spoke of the prineiple of office-holders on the floor of the House, and contended that he had not changed his views regarding that principle. He, however, con- fessed that on that point he had to make con- cessious, in deference to the views held by some members of the party. In conelading his address, he alluded to the factious opposition which he bad heard would be offered to his return, and advised his friends, in the event of such Opposition, to yo to the polls aad record their votes, and not to remain at home under the impression that because of the weakness of his opponents it was unnecessary for many of the electors to poll their votes. Any apathy of that kind might result in a defeat. He, therefore, expressed the hope that all his friends would record their votes, and thus prove to their oppouents the utter folly of their fac- tions and forlorn movemeut, atin — The Proprietor of the Charlottetown Read- ing Room and Merchants’ Exchange—Mr. A. MeNeill—has issued a weekly © Prices Cur- rent and Shipping Intelligencer,” the first of the kind ever published ia Charlottetown, We hope that the mercantile classes will give substantial encouragement and support to Mr. McNeill’s laudible enterprize. The * Prices Current’ contaius the latest wholesale market quotations and shipping news; and under the heading “ Remarks,’’ will be found that im- portant information touching Sales, &c., so by 136 to 92 votes. This vote in effect. abolishes sech iioprisonment. The Prince of Orange and the: Count ef Flanders have postponed their visit aaa consequence of information conveyed to them by telegraph, to the effect that there would be no inaugaral ¢eremouy at the opesiagyef the Exhibition. Latest Lisbon dates sumeutce that popular tumalts have taken place in Operte on account of the new taxes. Troops were ordered out to restore order, _ sf The News of the World of the 31st of March states that Mr. Disraeli’s Budget to be sub. mitted to the Imperial Parliament, will ask fo- an income of some £70,000,000 to meet the expenditure of ihe current year. The chan of the National Debt carries off twenty #ix mil- lion pounds, the Army fifteen million pounds, the Navy eleven million, and the Civil Serviee of the country fourteen million. 7 Fenian arrests continue to be made in Ire land. James O'Brien, manager of a commer. cial establishment in Cork, ebarged with being a Head Centre, and with leading a Feniau at- tack on Ballynookin Police station, was com- witted for trial for high treason, Fe is said to have been in correspoudence with Stepheas. Several arrests have beem made in Mil Cork, ow charges of being concerned in ap at- tack on Mount Leader House by ou armed body of Fenians, led by an American officer. The Canadian Iutercolouiml Railway | three million pounds sterling has been | teed, Mr. Addelly, in introducing the subject in the Howse of Commons, made a long ¢ poiming owt the great advantages which loan would confer on the Colonies, and eon- tended that there was no fear of any ultimate loss to the Mother Country. A division ow the question shewed a majority im favor of the pre- posal of 247 agniust 67 votes. A vote of £2,- 000 was agreed to im the House of Commons to be distributed m rewards to the Ivish Con- stabulary engaged in the suppression ef the Feuian outbreak. THE EARTHQUAKE IN SMYRNA MYTILENE—NEARLY A THOUSAND LIVES LOST. The Matta Times pablishes i ing details of the terrible eart ¢ which was. felt essential to every man of business. This valu- able weekly circular will be forwarded from the | Patriot vilice to subscribers on receipt of we dollar per annum ju advance, > > o——_—_—__—_—__—_ Bay” Ly is reported by 4 late telegram to this) piace, that flour hus advanced im price from) one to two dollars in Boston, aud still showed an upward tendency, — -~> <- e- + A serious and fatal accident ocearred on the Great Western Railway, Canada, a few days ago. The night mail train West, ran inte a special freight train going the same way. ‘The conductor of the freight train, and the baggage man of the mail train were killed, The conductor's car on ths special train, aud the baggage car on the the mail train were burnt, together with about $170,000 in bills &e: A great deal ef freight was also destroyed. Some of the passengers were in- jured, _/:- ~ We trust that Mr. Whelan’s Charlottetown, visiting his friends in the) Second District e° King’s County, previeus to| the election contest on Weduesday next, will | be aveepted as an excuse for the omission of | more editorial matter than sppears in the present No,, as, under other cireymstanges, there are some subjects which would havé en- gaged the editor's special attention, aiieaill from . ~~ err Cononer's Tyquest.—An Inquest was held ou Monday last, before Dr. Beer, one of the Coroners for the County, on view of the body of Archibald Munroe, gne of the unfortunate men drowned at North Kiyer, on Saturday the | 6th instant. Verdiet— yceidentally drowned while intoxicated.” Myrrow’s body has not yet been found. sertieg atta aap The North British Review, established some twenty years azo, ag the organ of the Free Church of Scotland, jas, front the first, occu- pied a very high pogition in British periodical literature. Ti is nog a religious’ journal— as this term is gengyally understood—perhaps not more so than the Edinburgh orthe London, though it ix designed to fill the want so often felt aud expressed by Dr. Arnoid tor books on general subjects, written from a Christian stand poiut. Si oe raced We learn from the Cape Breton News that the dwelling house of Alpxander Munro, Exq., Post- waster at Boulardegje, with its entire contents, was recently constinyed by fire, The fire it is eup-| posed originated by the placing of hot asbes iv a barrel in a back hal]. Mr. Munro at the time of the occurrence Was ghsent at Baddeck attending the Court of Sessions there. Mrs. Munro, and the other inmates of the house, had a narrow escape : having providentially got out of the burning build- ing Without injury. Nothing was saved, a valuable library was also iost. sbbsabSSisaldgbag dabei gax- The Steamer Atnammra, of the Boston & Colonial 8. 8. Co.'s line, will leave Boston, for Charlottetown, on Tuesday vext, the 16th inst., and will he followed by the Commence, the week after. ye pa Bite Quick Passace.—By telegraph from Canso we learn that the ®ehr Alice, Crocker waster, with a carge of Suggr and Molasses for this port, cousigned to Messrs. Carvell Bros, arrived at Port Mulgrave in ten days, from Cuba, and will be probably the first arrival here from the Gut. > oe The N. Y. Board of Health have issued a cir. cular warning the pyblic of the probable approach of cholera thi# summer. =n —-vemguaeainllih dA is css) Forty thousand dollars of the paper of the Westmorland Bank was burned in the presppce of the Directors lagt week ; and all the paper _re- ceived during tha week received a like. fgte. | which led from the seashore to the interi on the 7th, Sth, and %th of March at Smyrna, Masnetia, Adramiti, in the Durdavelles;at Gal- lipoli, Constantinople, and throughout the natghduring dintricte. At Adramiti, hie liu, the earth heaved vielently a second tame on the morning of the Sth. The terrified iu habitants sought refuge on theadjoining heights, | but some fled to the shore, addy to take shel- ter inthe shipping if the shocks contimued. A letter from Mytilene, the ancient Island of Les- bos, dated the 9th ef March, save: Bn W nesday the 6th, the weather was dull and heat disagreeable, but no presentiments felt of the sad events which were to follow. In the memory of man no earthgxake hud been felt ow the island. At six o'clock on the morn- ing of the &th a severe shock, lastimy between fifteen andeigkicen moments, rocked the town, and, «fter aehort interval, ed, much longer and more violent. I saw ther inside the harbour heave and foam as #a a marine explosion was aboutto take place. My Pregpaywers not, however, hast ser Bae, m fact, for in less tim® than it takes me to tell I saw al! the surrounding buildings moving ws if they were drunken men, atu the solid Bloeke of masonry, of which the peirs are const tumbling ‘like card-houses. Nearly rhe buildings which belong to the Custom-howse, the Light-house, and the large oi! mill, alee gave way. Tn all the streets houses fell, ing their inhabitanis beneath their ruins. ‘ ancient and beautiful castle, the cathedral, the- sovernor’s palace, the prisons, the mosques, and T believe all the oleae ate more or less injured, and for the most partare no better than a mass of ruins, The very se lidity and strength with which the houses ik the towy were constructed, rendered more serious the effects of this great calamity, and have mul tiplied a hundredfold the ae of have perished or have lost their wen That part of the town which was lowest suffered most. The earth literally opened and engulfed a number of buildings, forming a street af pe ah and that which was ar on W : ay afternoon the most frequen of Myti- lene is now actually outed by mos cad covered by heaps of mud. More than one-half of our beautiful town, the most delightful and the gayest in the whole Levant, is nothing more than a desert heaped with ruins. What is still sadder to record is the number of deaths. tis calculated that from 800 to 1,000 persons have been killed, and a still more considerable nuw- ber wounded and disabled. The houses which are still standing ave nearly all cand the surviving population scattered th hills and gardens in the vicinity of the Some persons have the shelter of te dwellings, the rest are living in the open without any shelter. The seareity of ood greatly inereases the distress, and valess prampt aid be sent from Smyrna, the will be. very great. The town of Mytilene not the only sufferer by this calamity, it has made ruins and victims in the northern part of the island, It is doubtfnl whether a siugle village has been snved. Not only has —-. ty suffered, but almost ev numbers of dead and dying.” Two strong shocks ot phen oy ws were felt at Smyrna on the 15th and 13th inst. Shocks 9 continue to oceur at Mytiléne, Phocia aud Chio. ’ - FRANCE, TRE REPORTED ALE OF LUXEMBURG.. It is now generally credited that F heen trying to buy the Grand Duehy of its law- ful owner, the King of Holland; but the man in possession” is pot the King, but the irre- pressible Bi . The Deena 4 ' eapital of the Duch eae hogan j gic importance, before the Prus- - ret A vol emagy iton behalf of the Germanic Confederation. When the Con “cok © lapsed Count Bismarck reinforced on, and has repeatedly invited the Kiug, as Duke of Luxembary, to join the North German Confederation. The story goes that t Res of the Netherlands, pressed hy the Prev gociators eds dgvookt to sell outlying pro- vinée to Frariee, provided the Prussians could be induced to give it up, and thatyCount marek had agreed to withdraw his allow France to oceapy it, provided the fortifi- cations of Lax were previcu ished. It would be an important acq France, whe once o jt... The Duchy ’ epmetd mate eas 1,652 square miles, and contalos i of 203,000 it- habitants. Ite F + i Fe Interest 18 to be vp all moneys deposi in the Bank. on pa itowns, ape: tees burg, an a eda fortress, Diekineh wed Ech at