e rhe Vol. VDE. Stoves! STOVES!!! ’ “i Fea! = Tea! j UST landed from Darque : THERES A,’ ' 2 snd for sale by the subscriber 100 Chests & Boxes TEA, New and Improved Stylo for Warranted good, and will be sold cheap for Cash Economy, Comfort. and Cheapness. , ; WM. MeGLLL. «h. Town, Nov. 3, 1862 rw Ow pest received at ORWELL CHEAP - - e STORE, a new stock of the almost everlasting KIN SQUARE HOUSE Yarmouth. N.S. Stoves—NOT YANKEE MANI 0) FACTURE. hey are numbered 1, 2, and 3, with pat suyte and double ovens for Cooking HATS and CAPS. | GOOD variety in FUR, CLOTH Wool, Felt and Silk, latest styles BEER & SONS, ALSo--—— A »| for Schoolhouses, Churches, &e., Ke. They w ill - sold on favourable terwas, if taken during this } month, so as to make room for other fall Supplies hin use they will suave over other Stoves on half in fire wood, besides much valuable time, Which is equal te money. They have given eenerul satis RUBBERS, RUBBERS. F ae: } faetion to all parties who have used them for the . — = ° 7 1 a ROESE STUCK IN 7 FE | 'ast five years, and whoare ready to t stify to thei: cll ‘ ‘ Landes inehod Misses’, Gents’, 8efalness. ‘The readiness witlr which thajaemart Souths” gud Children's Boots and Shoes | Kreut heat, has been remark d by all who ise BEER & SONS } them, and in old dwellings as well as ne w, have , ; been productive of great comfort. while they do a ae : | not cost mere than the old brick or stone chimney a, BOOT S & SHLOF Q } Which take ap so much room, and are now belig es generally thrown down. They are supplied with , . * , r . r at» 2 . > . : N GREAT \ ARIETY, for Misses, lurge metal Boilers, very useful for dyeing pur Gece Vaieka t Children ve 5 7 — soup), Or preparing food for Cattle, a . icin und can be Kept constantly in use, at a very anal! ' yi ut 3 ' vad BEER & SONS. | cost for tus I, aud without the least risk from tire Bshert, the great advantages to be derived from | these wonderful, celebrated, and unsurpassed STOVES } can ouly be known from a trial of them ; and fur SEALSKIN COA TS, QE SUPERIOR QUALITY , a, s tess wey ete ie ce nae Ruesin Pap, ae EK. m Lamb and Nutri Skins, them, at the ORWELL CHEAP STORE very suitable tor Caps und Coat Collars ithun the cheupest Country Store on the BEER & SONS | Where the yvreatest varitiy of GOODS may Ik j found, from a NEEDLE w an ANCHOR, both : . included DRESS GOODS! | P. STEPHENS NCLUDING Plain and Faney REPS.| Orwell, November 10, 1862 idvin BAKATUEAS, Plain and Cheeked Winecies. | slus, ¢ cussiau Cloths, Cs buries, Lustres, &« BEER & SUNS im Upon , Che “per & WANTED, at the above Store, 500 COW and “©-)} OX HIDES, and 500 SHEEP SKINS, for whic : the highest price will be paid in CASH or trade CAPITAL Assortment of Mufilers.| PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ea: Collars, Gloves, Printed Flanne. FASHIONABLE BEER & SONS. Blankets, Blankets. SIZES AND QUALITIES. BEEK & SONS ete CHARLES BELL, (QUEEN SQUARE CHARLOTTETOWN Al’ MARDWARE. | Wewest desigus at present in the i : : : j Depart went of the Woolk i Drapery Tru e isamply FRAME usual assoriment, including IRON, | represented in bis Establishient. Mix GOODS aa i Sleigh Sho ing STERBL ;ure decidedly ot the Newest and Best Class muna he a 7 jfaetared; they have been carefully seleeted from BEER x SUNS. j the beet Wholesale Houses in Britain for his trade nee and have bes — hased for CASH, which is a very STOY ES, STO V ES. important _— ; J pi . s be ks } HARLES BELL is, therefore, ina position te PEHE LEVLATHAN COOK, for wood | his custothers the verv best value, and can, : u au which sive auch excellent enticfection. A me tin® contidently recommend the artick COAL COOK STOVES. Parlor | Is. Mle enumerates a few leading articles as West of Envland and York shire CLOTHS Beavers, Whitneys aud Pilot COATINGS; Doeskins: Cassimeres Euvlish and Seoteh i TWEEDS; Velvet, Silk, Valeutia, and i } Market wet ive, Cus e lu the market at present. ) wn fow™ superior Moves fer both wood and coul; large Dex Sieves, | suitable fur churches and seloollhouses Heavy BEER & SONS. Marseilles Vessriscs; @etuce TEA, TEA, TEA. Edward Island Homeseens; SIGHTY CHESTS and TWENTY | Twitted and Shirting FLANNELS. Gentleman's . - Scalia ads s rr urticl Shirts and Collars: Shetland and Lamb's Wool 4 MALE CHESTS, ORER SUNS. | ENDER CLOTHING; Scarfs, Ties, and - : | Muttlers Fur, Clot! Wool & Kid } Gloves ; Braces, Sucks, Umbrellas, | We iuvite inspection of the shove, together with | and Trauuks, Fur, Cloth, Glused, a large and varied assoftment of useiul GUS.) Reversable, and other WINTER CAPS; Sil from iwtending purchasers, coutident that tk | Felt, Wool, aud Glazed HATS; FURS—Rus quality and prices will meet their expectations sian D “ibe rnan Laut Nutria, and HEE As SONS. arial: tind et November 24, bez. ow { The best amortwent of TAILORS TRIMMINGS Fs — to this Ishaned, iu Cout Linings, S ever lips ' | Linings, Vest Backs and Linings, Cout Canvas i Vassar, Wilding, Coat and Vest Druids aud Diud inves, Des ' and other NEW GOODS! Ning ot ESENT and ENSUING' s TRON FOR PR 7: one | TAILORS’ TREN MINGS, Too numerous to"Meution } HE subseribor has received Ex.| Ready-Made Clothing. | * Prieresa,” “ Uranas.’ and “* ‘Theres,’ from Phie Beane of bis Yrade is unnsually large at London aud Liverpool, a well assurte. STOCK of | present | (wing to tie ce pression of the tithes 7 i it “er o's . } sone requiring Suits will get them at very RE British and Foreign Goods, iced rice. ewbracing every thing iu his line. i MOURNING, LA DIELS’ DREss GOODS, land ul! other orders for Clothing preiny tly attended | I» Britiey and Foreign Keps, Plain and Cheeked | to, and good fitting Fashionable Articles vnaranteed Viueeyvs, Cheeked Mohairs, Plaid and Printed) [@* Gentlemen who have been in the “habit ef | Alpacus, Cash meres, Cobarya and Orleans, Black | getting their Clothing made up, through ‘Tailors Ghucie aad Colored Silks, Persians; Shawls and | choosing their Cloth aud Trimmings for them, from | Mautlex ju the mewest styles, Mantle Cloths, | the diferent Stores, would find it totheir advantage | Ladies’ and Misses’ Prize Exhibition Hat«. Plumes | to examine the Stock ef Cloths aud Trinuwwings, and } wed Feathers te wateh; a large assortment in| enquire the prices for making up at this Establish (Howes, Gauntlet», Armlets, Hair Nets, &c. &c.; | ment, before they purchase elsewhere, as they can | Sioves!! Large and Small Franklin & Box Stoves, | Isiaud, | Tailoring Establishment! RAILWAY \ NNOUNCES the arrival of his FALL | | SR and WINTER GOODS, which are all of the | kL very | lunother, nor, as I have said, had they even | % look for our lugyage, and in the erowd we | bad been so throughout the narration}, and iterature, a n is is tene Liberty, when Freehorn Men, having to advise the Public, may spenk free.’’---Euripides. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, December 1, 1862. : cg eR TOP oe To lat ea cele laemeiaaaia ins ate ee litle a nd Alews, LITER . ce ERATURE, know, then, until the last four years [ was ‘circumstances of the ease. THE AUTUMN LEAF. by no means the sombre and reserved person | L already owed him a considerable sum, but nro roe | 1 now appear. i was sprightly and viva- that that was by no means the worst of it one trembling one cious, and even in the company of strangers (from my point of view), for that in addition _| accustomed to converse without the least ‘0 this, I had not got a shilling to take me (hou lingering Were? | pegerye, A morbid desire to establish my- “orthwards. This good and trustful person self in the good opinion of everybody im. —Who always seems to me the incarnation pelled me, perhaps, 00 much to sociality, and Of tender faith—not only credited me for my having given way to this may go far, the eight pounds or so for which I was al- alas ! to convince a certain individual that [| eady indebted to him, but furnished me am indeed the villain which be would other- | With eight more for the expenses of my jour- |wise have only suspected me to be, If [) ey. Now, considering that the name I : Why dost thou cling tind my pocket picked upon leaving a rail-|bad given him might have been assumed, or, Fondly to the round supless tree ? way carriage,’ observed the officer with’ if genuine, might have been totally worthless, energy, ‘my suspicions naturally fix them- { consider this to have been a convincing selves oa the stranger who has manifested | proof of that benevolent which, the greatest desire to be my friend.’ | contend, prevails The young divine here flashed all over, like of those whom I am a western cloud at sunset, and cast down hig | !ow-creatures. 7 was 1 eyes as though he bad been himself accused now I am seventy one, » |of petty larceny; while the man in the cloak “ever been paid yet.’ fumbled at the window, with the intention,| ‘ What an infamous Bunarel, exclaimed as it really seemed, of getting at the door-| the officer with indignation. handle and jumping out, | ‘Nay, certainly uot,’ said 1; ‘he would ‘I was once travelling on this very line,’ | have acted precisely as did the hotel-keeper resumed the cflicer more calmly, after a | if he hag@ chanced to havedeen placed in his Last of a summer's race, withered and sear And shivering —wherefore ar , Thy work is done! Thou hast seen all The summer flowers reposing in their tomb | And the green leaves that knew thee in their bloom | Wither and fall! Has then existence aust like charm for thee, Thou faded thing ? The voice of Spring, Which woke the« imto be lng, ne er again Will vreet thee, New verdure bring nor the gentle Summer raia | The zephyr's breath No more will wake for thee its melody ; But the lone sighing of the blast shall be The hymn of death Yet a few days, A few faint struggles with the Autumn storm, And the strained eve, to catch thy trembling form, | chanced to be quartered, to London ; and and kindly hearted of mankind. Pecuniary isingularly enough the conversation of my | Obligation was, however, a matter beneath Ju vain may paz About the dead! laughed a good dea! at various circumstan- Devonshire he was doubtless mistaken for oes Sik ces and contingencies which the question | little better than a swigdler.’ suggested, and got to be very friendly, My| ‘ Lt is a dreadful thing to be mistaken for companions all alighted at various stations, | S0mebody else,’ observed the young clergy- except myself and the gentleman with whom | 20 with a sigh, I bad been chiefly conversing. Aswewere| I was wondering whether the speaker j nearing the Terminus, observing me, I sup- | could ever have been by possibility mistaken ech now ear the gathering of the Antamn blast: I It comes—thy frail form trembles—it is past! And thou art low ! ts COMPANIONS. To walk on & railway platform down a ‘change colour, he aquired ; W hat Was the | proceeded as follows : line of carriages about to start, with a Brad- | aatiany and jt I had lost my railway ticket 2) * T was ace placed in a very uncomfort- shaw in your hand, anda travelling-cap on ‘No,’ said 1, * I have got my ticket, | able position myself, through an error in| your head, is to receive a broadside of in- | "°" have Tvscteally lost anything; bat {judgment on the part of a most respec’ able | dignant and’tepelling glances; «The trath just find out that ! have left my purse lock- | female. When 1 was a young man at Cam-| of this will, [ am sure, be admitted by everv- ed up in the desk in my quarters, and I have bridze, and even up to the time that I took body ; my own personal appearance is engag- perelets ere. away with only five shil- my degree, I had absolutely no whiskers. | ing in a very exceptional degree, and there. |“ Y8S |B MY pocket. ; * [Here he fingered a little mole upon his | fore what.I have experienced myself must ; om L be of any service to you? ins | right check, us though he would have said: | have becn undergone in amore. sggrarated ques my tompanjon drawing out his own \* Nothing of this leonine appearance that you | form by most people. For this reason err rg : /see In me wow."}] I was indeed almost effe- among others, I prefer to arr.ve early at a laa = an ery much, returned I, | minate-looking, and sowe of my foolish col- | railway station, so that I may establish any. | 208bings_* for ‘ ve proof of that coufidence | lege-friends nicknamed me ‘ Bella,’ and self in the. post .of, vantage, as Sret-comer, | 42: “S08 speaking about ; but although 1 + Bellirsima,’ which was even more ridicu- and survey my fellow-creatures with the |®™ gotug to a hotel, and it might have been | luus still, It was the long vacation, but air, 1 do wot aay of an eoemy well.intsench-| - lar inconvenient, 1 have a banker in Lon- certain business calling me to the univer- ed, but of a superior, and with an expression, a B : ity, [ took the train thither from town. At if not of hauteur, of cond: SCccusion. l Was . ’ = the bank will he closed by he s’ation I met some Cambridge friends, | hevefied annayed “enbeise ‘10° ad” mieaif| time Urged the gentleman ; ‘you had iwho were making a shorter journey than [, rather late last Saturday at London Bridge, fae: ~ 2 ee nt . | but of course we got ma the pam carriage, | and the train without a sitgle empty car- Nay,\eatid £5 in that ease. IT will take A rather severe-looking lady, with specta- therefore (and I flatter a five-pound note at once, which ican be | cles, Very siuut, and ngt very young, made myself returning), looks of hatred und de- wore easily Arausmitied by pee vow ™,|up our company. She looked a littie alarm- lianee, L walked hastily along the platform, | however, ” practical test of oe benevolent ed at the somewhat fast appearance of my vianciay into altthe-windowe-for tho lease | principles, which you could scarecly have | friends when she first entered; but upon crowded compartmcnt, and presently, select- | Saticipaged to occur so soon, A total their earncst assurance that they would not ed one which had only two passengers, rey , eninge : smoke nor compel her to take a hand at nsichennlsaiemeaimnnen-tean, surveyed | “A car — interrupted he with ecards, she grew reassured so far as they me with the oustoniaty score. mae pray do uot mention it. There is/ were concerned, | shall never forget, how- The one was a young divine, with an ex- | "0 eUlt ot cope tt Mg B becdheetg ever, the look of intense suspicion with pressiun that would have been eminently jto sce that you are an officer and a gentle- | which she regarded my unhappy self. My ‘gentiemanlike’ if it had not been »s0 ef-, — {oe had at first begn concealed by the news- femiuate as to be almost ladylike; the other) ‘Then he purposely changed the conyer-| Paper I was reading. but as soon as she looked like a military man (as indeed, he S4tion with a delicacy which I have since | Caught sight of a she gave a sort of virtu- turned out to be), but had rather a peculiar | uever ceased to regret ; for what with talk- Us shudder. oi hat had I done, thought I, ait of oppression aud melancholy, These | "8 and laughing, L forgot all about the loan | deserve this? I had a trick of colouring two did not seem to be acqusiuted with one Ul the train stopped, aud we went together | that time [the speaker was purple, and riage. Receiving, made the usual league together against the | Were separated without ever wishing each if daresay i became a little flushed. ‘Now, invaders of thrir privacy. While I had | other good-by, or remembering to exchange | Bella, dou ¢ blush, exclaimed onc of my myself been Jouking out for a seat, I had ur names and addresses, J don't know friends, in allusion to this infirmity ; where- | getcing my misfortune remedied. You must for the landiord, and expounded to him the I told bim that agord us much gratification.’ as! little pause, ‘from the town iu which | position. He was one of the most generous | fellow-passengers turned, as it has done to- | the consideration of his philosophy, which | zxaaini train, and of course the |pose, to search my pockets and suddenly | for anybody but his owa sister, when he | excited by that work. | to tell it us,’ observed I delicately, + it would | Here the narrator Auished bis et: : | the brandy and water. ‘ L have a bottle of emelling-salts in my ‘Then ‘the poor madman must, , carpet-bag, in case you should feel ovarsame,’ have wet bis death?’ said 1. said the young clergyman, * it is impoesible ; * And I never travel without this flask of | plied the naan — ai a brandy and water,’ added the officer, ‘which ‘ A skeleton, grasping the wires of an is very mach at your service.” ‘brella, was discovered years afterwards | * Under these circumstances, I will endea- peat-bog, at the exact spot where the acc: vour to gratify you,’ resumed the | dent happened; but I wever feel uite cafe addressed, * although the recital of the scene from meeting him again,’ . in question always unnerves me. You) doubrielss observed that I looked in at the t } | 4b in this carriage, and that even when I had/ nether, and that of very deep interest, is done so, I regarded you three geatlemen | “titled, * Mysteries of the Temple ;’ it pur- with considerable distrust. Moreover, you | PSS, 98 ® commencement, thix question : may have seen me shudder occasionally at |p The child whe died in the tower of the sentiments aud astions of yours which may ee on the 20th Prairial, in the year IIL have seemed to you innozent enough. The ("© June, 1795), was it the Dauphin, reason of this is, that I am morbidly appre- few of Louis the Sixteenth, ora child which | hensive of finding myself in the company of ’ pee substituted ; bey /any person not of sane mind. Once in my | * Allied Powers, it is belioved, long | life--an occasion 1 can never foreet—I was refused to credit the story of the Daaphin’s the fellow-traveller in a railway carriage | 0°th i and one writer of authority affirms |with a maniac.’ The narrator here took a | ‘™* Louis the Kightecnth was only reeoy- | prolonged sniff at the vinalgrette, * He was nized as King condition ally, _pending the a powerful man, and even if be had not been | 2°. of investigations which in"1814 were mad, I should have had anee with |! ‘a progress. him. We were alone together. » I was the | Jcan-Marie Hervagault, gon of a tailor of % , St.-Lo, was, perhaps, the most successful of | hon art s RE RPI a. day, upon mutual coufidence between man | Was aw and far reaching, but not}ricans of communicating with t : . all pretenders, Magnificeatly lodged in the } The broken heart, onee yonng and fresh like thee jand MAR. It commenced, | think, ania Se vensive of details. Mr. Edgar Poe himself could hard! rave | noe of Madame de Rambocour, whose widkendl ects aut ' | some observations of two mercantile gentie-| The innkeeper, however,’ observed the imagined a sehof @fcumstanccs tore hy. husband was proud of playing the valet to “ ; ; men upon the eredit system, but eventually | flicer, was not aware of that.’ paling. 2 is the dillicel | him, he became the idol of a voluntecr win’ Whose hopes are th d, panies itsétf into: What should be done)‘ True,’ said 1; ‘and yet, you see, how | bound to say, the gentleman eoudactel him- Court ; balls and concerts were incessantly | sect — eg ae eae ; oa died away, | OF not done in the cate dia stranger asking | lightly the great man bore the innkeeper’s | self’ with propriety. He t with | Sm his honour ; he was addressed as gs to life—and lingering, loves to stay to borrow money of any one of us? We Probable opinion of him. In the wilds of the utmost courteousness, er of a My Prines ;’ his portrait was in every | Punch and the Times, and appMAi himself hand, epee in every mouth. The Pope, | harmlessly enough, as it seemed, to thestude . was said, had stamped on the Dauphin's of Bradshaw. Whether excossive applica | og u particular mark ; and Hervagault’s leg |tion to that abstruse volume had been the |“ Cech Big agen er ee, Cove okies cones of his aubapns utilady, I -do| se limb, Besides which, he signed not know, but the particular frenzy of which | Sorte ig te a and whet - /1 was the miserable victim was certainly i — 8 50. eke a. anepen t ie coe Cd, at any rate, a pretty dynasty of impostors —Naundorff Richemout, Kleazer Williams : and each had his followers. Mathurin Bru- heay appeared and disappeared brilliantly ; ** Sir,’ observed he, with an air of intel- lectual langour, ‘ can you assist an unhappy echolar to discover the hour at which this; Naundorff was honoured, like a real prince train arrives at Madagasear ? 1 am aware | with an attempt at assassination: ut then ro we change carriages at the Equator at) Naundorff had a servant and a narse of the 2 +6, bat beyond that I cannot trace our royal household to acknowledge him. That route. 80 many false Dauphins proclaimed them- Then I knew, of course, that the man | Selves is, says M. Jouis Biane, no evidence had lost his senses. There wus a cold ma-/ that the real Dauphin died in the Temple :— liclous glitter in his eye, notwithstaading * The truth is, that the mysterious dicte. his soft speeah, which made my hand shake | Stances which preceeded the death of the son us : ee the proffered volume, and Pre- | of Louis the Sixteenth, the strunge reminis - ed to look out for Madagascar. To scences they reeall of the contradictory vumor bim, and to gain time, Were my only | nature of tho testimony adduced, the doubis objects. At what a snail’s pace we seemed | which existed at the time, the mublie and: to travel! How | envied the country lade | official falsehoods they disitad — wh ~ - that waved their ragged bats in the ficlds 45 which surrounded the facts of the betel” the train passed by; how gladly would | and finally ae ee a places with the milkman in whieh the A” the meadow, or the carter with his team, or | own : : : the policeman standing by the rail-side, with ciples _ fpeinpe Jy a comet his ‘ All Right’ flag up. All right, indeed, | tbo. co ean tan gh g up right, indeed, | tribute to give the eveat on which they beer and a first-class passenger about to be torn | a rank among the problems of histor , limb from limb perhaps by a mad-man! This problem M. Louis Blane ous not ‘ [ave you discovered Madagascar ?' asked, pretend to have ‘solved. Indeed his re- the maniac presently, with great irritation. searches have made it More a problem than ‘| was gbliged tg confess thgt I bad not | ever; though he obviously inclines to the as yet been so fortunate ; I had, however, | belief that the King’s som was uot the child still to explore the Seoteh railways, and | that died in the Temple :— perhaps (said 1) it might be somewhere) ‘We may, doubtices, be asked how it among them. coyld happen, if it be not true that the son ‘1 don’t think it likely,’ observed my | of Louis the Sixteenth died in the Temple, companion drily. ‘Do you mot chussne ye his existence should not be known, gnd those thick black lines which cut the way- | bis identity, by certain evidence, solemuty bill ’—he here drew his fiugers with fright- established. There is, indeed, room for ful energy across his throat-—* just as one| wonder. Nevertheless, the wonder will di- thinks ove is coming to one’s journey’s end ?| minish, perbaps, if we consider that at the That is the North Pole. The late lameptee | date assigned to his escape the Dauphin was Dr. Scoresby chopped it into small pieces for | scarcely nine years old ; that the whole of greater convenience. We can never be too Kurope was ther in 9 state of appaliing con- thankful for its introduction. Tet us drink | fysion ; that the royalist party was a focus the singular indifference with mory of a young prince, a king window once or twice before I took my seat | A Lovts Buaxe on Louis XVIC— * * ‘ Black and Colored Silk, Patent Faced and Genoa | save time and mouey, by getting all the articles |ubserved another man employed in the same | whither tosend the money, or how I shall ever Velvets: Kagleton'’s, Bradley's and Balmoral | required | : a . , ) search, w . » leas easily a: .J: |repay him; while be, 1 bave no doubt, con- steel Skirts. | At the lowest rate in One Place. 7 ho seemed to be less easily satisfied; | T°Pay j : . “or TERT tte Gents’ Coatings and Trowserings, The principle recognized and practically carried | lu supertine Black Cloth, Black and Faney Doe- | out at this Eetablishiwent is Speedy Sales and Light skins, Brown Melton, Black Beaver, Pilot and | Profits, for CASH. Seat Cloths, Keady-made Over and Business| The LATEST FASAIONS are always secured. Coats, Vests acd Pants, Neck Ties, Searts, Cra- Charlotictown, Oct. 27, 1862 vats, Mufflers, Kubber and Web Braces, Fancy | —-——— _ — or See eenitiaes Hemsend Gage, toceaghe| —geeemeel. amd Londen Felt ius sm Sea, Astrucan, Neutra, Sable} EERE AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. aad Counswen Seal Cape. “IYHE t for the above first class| t FLANNELS, BLANKETS, SERGES, English Fire Insurance Company begs to | Cirey, White aud Printed Cottons. striped ditto, (enabervs, Hackabacks and Diaper Towellings, Priated Oil Cuthe, Ke. &e eall the attention of the public to the advantages } LADIES’ & GENTS’ BOOTS & SHOES, offered by this Company, in respect to the security Kabber ditto, Felt and Kid Slippers. to the assured, and promptness to pay losses, whieh, ae disparaging other Companies, may be safely - i; asserted to be superior to those afforded by any Mardware, oil, Paint, | otber Company mth Island. The Liverpool and Plough Mounting, Cart Boxes and Pipes; a large | London F. & L. Insurance Company has been in| axecrtment of Shear Plates, Blister Steel, 6) and! guceesssul operation since 1836, with agencies all % feet chain Traces, eat and wrougit Nails, from | over the world, and has put in losses about two I te 2 inches, Euglish cut, American patter | mittions and a quarter sterling. Its anbseribed ea not till the bell rang and the train began to | ¢ludes that he bes met with a clever seoun- move, did this geutieman make up his wind |drel, who did hin out of a five-pound note. ws to what carriage he would travel in, | Simce that unfortunate hour, | have never when he evinced a tardy discernment in mak- | Pa*sed a happy day, and a journey by rail- ing choice of ours. Even then be threw! Way always makes me especially melancholy. such a suspicious glance arouad him, as one | | feel that my honour is tarnished, and that escaping from his creditors might cast at| ia the eyes of an houest man I am become three possible bailiffs, aud cowered into a|/% Swindler. I have advertised again and corner of the carriage, as though he had gin, to three times the value of the loan, only purchased the right to half a seat. without result, and while [ trust you will My journey did not promise very pleagant | #ake the circumftances known to as many upon they both burst out laughing. ‘I never before saw anybody look so shocked, and at the same time so indiguant, as did the old lady at this. She wore pre- cisely the same expression that the great Scotch reformer would bave worn, under the circumstances imagined by the poot : As though you had taken sour John Knox To the play-house uc Parix, Vienna, or Munich, Fastened him into « front-row bex, And danced oft the ballet in trousers and tunic. I shall never forget her. My companions, I believe, were not entirely aware of the hideous notion that had taken possession of ee | ‘divine was shy, and the last comer gave a | ly, for, like the Great Lexicographer, | am people as possible, I have very little hope her mind, but [ knew very well. Their fond of talk, and it did not seem probable | that the man I have unwitting] ywewronged | calling me ‘ Bella’ had changed her suspi- that I should get it. The officer was silent, | Will ever be put in possession of the trath.’ cion to certainty. She thought I was a fe- ‘ My dear sir,’ exclaimed the clergyman | male in wan’s attire. When they got out terrified start whenever he was addressed. | with unexpected boldoess, + I feel for you at their station with a * Good-bye, Bella,’ | A trifling circumstance, however, gave an/deeply. I remember that in the famous|* By bye, Bellissima, till we meet at the the health of the North Pole; let us com- | of intrigues; that its principal leaders only pose an ode to its Lew Thermometorship. | saw in the re-establishment of monarchy a Come, you begin.’ prey to devour, and between rival pre- * At this point, the narrator almost drain-| tensions beld themselyes in readivess to sup- ed the brandy flask in his nervous trepida- port those who would make the largest pro- tion. His excitement was communicated to | mises; that the Coynt of Provence, beir ourselves, and I believe if the train had! prosumptive to the crown in default of di- stopped anywhere during this enthralling | rect succession, combined with bis profound portion ef the story, each of us would rather | astuteness a violent desire to reign; that have been carried beyond his mark thag he had @ powerful interest in leaving amid missed the denouement. | the shadows with which events had syrrownd- ‘ Come, you begin,’ repeated the madman | ed it the fate of his nephew ; and that after with a look of extreme ferocity; + * Rell, the Restoration, which placed Louis the roll, North Pole,’ or something of that kind ; | Kighteenth on the throne, the fact of Louis but not with your clothes on. How dare|the Seventeenth restored and recognized you address his Low Thermometership in might have opened every question aucw and that unseemly garb ?” created incalculable embarrassmente.' ‘In a quarter of a minute my companion} He adds— had divested himself of every article of rai-| -‘Onthe 4th of Marck, 1820, an indivi- = ee ¢ € * . i! ye vr es ae “ae * * ¢ A A 0 a Se dl Oe a Be ee Sl ae ae roaril PASTE For Horseshoe Najila, &e. Ke Catlery. Window Cilass, Powder, Shot, Gian Caps, Coftin Mountings, Black Lead, Blacking in tins and you ues, Hrashes of all Winds, Hoes, Shovele, Manure | Forks, Spades, Hames. A «rent vuriety of SMALL WARES and DYE STUFPs. GROCERIES. English TEA, of the best quality ; bright Porto Rico SUGAK, Crushed, de., 4 Bloom Raisins, Spicer, dee. &e The remainder of bis Stock daily expected by the “Lady Milne,” to Halifax, and Brig“ Maria White,” trom Lenton. : al PATRICK WALKER. Walker's Corner, Nov. 17, 1862 un Hardware. HE Undersigned is landing, per EDA MARIA, fron Bosros and from Esouasp,— EAGLE PLOUGHS, FAGLE © PLOUGH MOUNTINGS, HMONSE NAILS, PUWDERK AND SHOT. ALFRED PHILLIPS. Sharlettetown, Oct. 15, TR. NOW LANDING, Ex Carrie M. Rich, from Boston, 100 BBLS. FLOUR, 1) Toxes © ANDLES, Septe nber 8. ai 20 Moxes LOZENGES. oo. PRUCE DEALS and DEAL END2, , VINE BOARDS, - Vine Painuges Cedar Shingles, MORRIS Sawn alo Laths and Deut Edging for Sale JAMES PURDIE. Charlottetown, Aug. 12, mei No More Choking! {iE Hairs of Hoepkin's Adamantine- Kewenied Tours Bucsues wil) not come out by eua@dorce. For sale at the City Drag Store W. R. WATSON Ch. Towa, Nev. 10, be A Benatiful Set of Teeth. DPEKFECT freecom from premature de- cay, and Teeth of a pearl like whitness, by f dJous Guesett & Co's VHEKR F sale at the City Drug . me WATSON é 1 wavy. 10, 150 ? Mot assts, Soap, Candles, | | pital is £2,000,000 sterling, and its invested funds alone amount to £1,512,000 sty; and the fire pre miams for 1861 amount te £360,130 198 %d- and in ad- dition to this very lirge capital, the Company, | having been established before the recent Limited Liability Act, the individual fortunes of exch of the | shareholders, comprising some of the wealthiest |} merchants in Liverpoo! and London, are liable for | the losses, should the whole of the capital be swept | away. any other Company established here. And lastly, the Agent being appointed by Power of Attorney directly from Eugland, is authorised to draw Bills the momeut a loss occurs, and without j referring to the Home Company, to the extent of one thousand pounds sterling. | With these superior advantages, the Company is j not disposed (though it might be well justified te jask a bigher rate of premium than other English | Companiex, which do net present the same advan- taveous features, and the Avent has been advised that au uniform rate has been agreed apon by the Directors of this Company and the ** Queen's,’ and that the Avents here should, in this respect, ‘uct } in concert.” ' W. A. JOUNSTONE, Agent of the Liverpool and London ! Fire Insurance Company. Nor. }', 1862. isl Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping. RULES AND REGULATIONS. | UTICE is hereby given that in pursu- ance of Resolutions passed by the Conunitice ou tie 20th of Mareh, the following Rules bav« been amended, viz :—~ See. 39, so as to reqnire that ships, the length of | whieh exceeds eight times but is under nine times their depth, shalt have the sathe longitudinal strengthening as is prescribed for ships the lenyth of which exceeds five times their breadth ge _ } And that, where the length exceeds yme times, {amd ix under ten times theirdepth, they be sahjected to the same requirements as those which exceed in length six times their breadth. And im cases where the dJenith exceeds ten times | the depth, the Builders or Owtiirs are to submit, | for the Committee's approval, their jo Lankes for giving | the Vessel the necessary strength longitudinally. eee By ork ¢ of the Committee, GEORGE I. SEYFANG, Sceretary KICHARD SLOGGETT, Surveyor. 2, White Liomw Court, Corulijll, E. C. dlet May, ise | ‘NOW LANDING, S Fa BER Sehr. Tuomas Cuter, from py NEW YORK 16> Bble. Extra nud superior FLOUR Which will be seld low for Cash M. LOWDEN, Peake’s Buildings. Ne 3, be impetus to conversation. At the first sta- | novel ‘ Oliver Twist,’ there is no situation | Leger ’ (Lused to go to races in those days), ' ment except bis shirt, and 1 was doing my | dual named Caron, who had been in the ser- tion we stopped at, the officer bought a six-| more painful to a man than when he ‘s car- | I fell in a cold perspiration at being lett! post to follow his example. * Hasten,’ cried | vice of Louis the Sixteenth, who bad visited Io this respect it differs, it is believed, from | penny newspaper, and having no silver,| ried away by Sikes with Mr. Brownlow’s alone with that old woman. I pretended, | gave the boy half a sovereign, who hurried | books in his possession, so that the benevolent | however, to be deeply interested in Bvdi's to procure change. A -cousiderable time geutleman’s faith in bim is shaken, and the | Life. I heard some remark which sounded | ciapsed, the whistle sounded, and we began | honest Jad lies under the imputation of being like ‘a pretty paper for a young woman to” slowly to move away. Just as we cl a thief,’ | be reading,’ but I affected not to listen. The the very end of the platform, however, the; ‘At the same time,’ said 1, * your in-| situation was dreadful. If she began to up- lad appeared panting at the window with | nocence, Sir, should at least protect you from braid me, what measures should I take to, the uine-and-sixpence. ‘You have been | the stings of conscieuce ; yoy bave nothing to | convince her of her scandalous error ? Pre- | fortunate, sir,’ remarked I smiling ; ‘1 had | reproach yourself with but forgetfuloess in | seutly, however, she commenced collecting | begun to fear that you would lose your not having revealed your name. The phi- the baskets and parcels, of which she bad an money. Your patience under the circum- | losopher of whom [ have already spoken iufinite sumber, aud I felt to my great relief | stances testified to your better opiuion of hu- owed more mouey and comforted himself on that she was golng to get out at the next | man nature.’ slighter grounds; but then he had philosophy station. W hen she had all her goods about | ‘ Human nature is much vilified,’ return- to console him, for the possession of which | her, and the train was slackening speed, she ed the officer gravely ; * if we knewit better, | indeed he bad a European reputation.’ took up ber umbrella, and shaking it in my, we should live more happily with our fellow- | creatures. As it is, however, we are in reality less suspicious of them than we pre- | eagerly. tend to. Not ouly is Honesty the rule,and| *‘ At a certain dinner-party, then,’ said I, Koguery the exception in the world, but ‘at which the philosopher and myself were there is a much greater amount of confidence | present, the conversation tucued (as it was between man and man than is generally very apt to do under his guidaner) upon the acknowledged.’ e | perfectibility of the human species. lluman ‘Lhave heard the same sentiment cor- nature, he contended, was not obly capable roborated,’ observed 1, * from the lips of a/of perfection, but was already much nearer great philosopher,’ a“ to it than clergymen and others imagined. ‘I have had it confirmed in my own There was a beautiful confidence existing in person,’ replied the officer sighing ; ‘ L have our common nature. Suspicion was only experienced an act of trustful kindness from for attorneys and police detectives. He had % — sex.’ ; E , a stranger which will embitter my life tomy had the most satistactory experience of this| _ ‘Twat was a more distressing railway dying day. ‘throughout a protracted existence, but more 2dventure than even yours,’ observed | to This éurious statement was delivered ina especially in his youth, He then proceeded the officer. med tone of such melancholy depth that even the ‘0 communicate to us a particular example,| ‘It is the most awful incident that ever ‘* Madam,’ [ replied with ail gentleness, ‘IT assure you’ * * Don’t speak to me,’ interrupted she ; ‘don’t attempt to deceive me, girl; I knew you from the first moment | saw you.’ ‘After getting down from the carriage with some difficulty, she tock the trouble to climb up the gtep again, and put her head into the wiadow with these words: ‘| tell you what it is,Miss Bella, you're a disgrace | ‘Io my early manhood | ran away from my oceurred to anybody on any railway,’ said ‘I should very much like to hear his terrified countenance, exclaimed: * Ob, | Opinion on the matter,’ observed the officer a you ashamed of yourself, you impudent bussy ? he, ‘insolent minion, for Mad, Madder, | the Temple after the transfer of the Loyal Madagascar is drawing nigh,’ | Family to that prison, aud who possessed, ‘ No buman beings, I suppose, ever pre- | or pretended to possess, in connexion with sented a more astounding spectacle than did | the abduction of the son of Louis the Six- | we two in our airy garments, kneeling upon teenth, important seeret details, vanished the floor of that railway carriage, and apos- | suddenly after a series of visits from a great trophising the North Pole. I felt my senses | personage of the Court, without his family were fast deserting me through excess of |ever being enabled to discover a trace of terror, and that if the plan which now sug- him. How shall we explain this disappeag- gested itself should fail, it would indeed be ance.’—Keview of Louis Blanc’s History all over with me. of the Revolution. ‘What!’ exclaimed I, ‘ is it possible that | you venture to speak to the N. P. without) previously putting your head through the. carriage window ?” ‘Iu an instant he had Jeaped up, and darted his bead and neck through the pane Force or Examrie.—The “ Prayer of Twenty Millions,’’ has called out a host of imitations, and the amount of good advice wasted is beyond all calculation. The most modest of al] these counsellors signs himself Aristides, and the New York Independent prints his words of wisdom. He says to the President—‘* Restore the Union with peace, fraternity, and love, make us once more one people, and uniold a scheme for the deliver- ance of four'millions of ana@her race from tho bondage of servitude, caste, colour, and con- dition, raising them to the condition and en- joyment of an indepennent people, with a high destiny of their own to be worked out by their own laws, and then, Mr. President. bik. Your grave shall beim the hearts of a grateful, ransomed, happy people, aud in- fant lips and old They ’g Songues to the last syllable of recorded time will jink your name with Washington.” We do not think this ‘as though it had not been there. The sharp fragments of the glass retained him, so that he could sot draw his head back without great pain and difficulty, and in the mean- time | had opened the other door, and, at the hazard of my life, clambered into the next carriage, where I found a stout gentle- man asleep, Who was almost frightened into fits by my unexpected and horrible appear- ance. lle gave me, however, bis railway rug to wrap around me, aod I was narrating to him the dreadful events which had just happened, when, lo! there was a scrabbling at the open window, and then we beheld the ‘maniac bleeding from his wounded throat, his hair streaming like a meteor, his shirt in a thousand ribbons, his whole appearance | young clergyman yeatured to glance with ) at See astonishment at the speaker, and the gentle- stay-at-home frieuds in Yorkshire, who were the young clergyman, wipiug | bis ala- calculated to strike terror into the strongest Hate Pas . man in the corn@r protruded his head cau- ignorant of, and inattentive to, the yearnings baster forehead the perspiration ich had mind. It was evidently his intention to get beeu evoked by these distressing details. ‘ It is nothing of the kind, sir,* observed the man ia the cogner, emerging suddenly from his retirement ; ‘ it is but.as a ¢: tiously from his cloak collar like a tortoise from Ms shell, in order to listen for more. ‘Sir,’ satd 1, ‘if the matter to which you of the passionate soul, and disported myself as long as my sleuder purse permitted in the wilds of Devonshire. Wheu my money was Destruction. axnp Caprore or Feperai Surrs sy rue *s290.” — fotelligence has ‘been received that the Alabama ;the 200), Captain Semmes, has destroyed three in. The stout gentleman, speeehless with terror, pointed to his umbrella, suspended in the cradle above the seat in which I had PO, eee: mr OT ‘ 4 ; z : } } allude demands no secrecy, the narration— exhausted, | left off that vagabond life, and aw placed myself, ,1 seized this weapon, and i ene me I think L wepeak for 6 a gentlemen put up at a respectable hotel. Although | of wind to a tornado when compared with a the ussistane@of my new companion, As leary — oa ‘J —would i tus very much, [ray tell must have looked dirty and travel-stained the experience that | have met with aa mauaged to push the iptrgder with such vio- a st a ioe ond Sn tl ” esit.’ enough, and had only aknapsack for luggage, traveller. My nerves are shattered, my lence, that, afier 9 tremendous struggle, he shi - sDahet kali atin 7 ‘ It is bat a short story,’ said the officer, uo question was put to me as to my solvency, spirits are broken, [ haye become the wréek | was obliged to loose his hold of the door- ips, - g re \ ‘and | will gladly narrate it, not only to which itself was a charming proof of natu- oblige you, because the more people who ral confidence, After passing a week or so hear it, the less improbable ig the chimes of in these very co.gfoptable quarters, 1 seus, you now behold, in cousequence of a single railway adyenture.’ Lt yoy gould compose yourself so far as handle, and seize the umbrella instead. Then we instantly let go of it, aud the wre tched man tuabled back wayds off the traig. The present population of the Confederate | Stetes comprise abvut 12,000,009 peopic.