WPCA RES 2 eas. ft W EEKLY eed JOURNAL OF tk AUNT ee at we eens en COREE OREN. Gh Ne RE 208 RE LTB oat DOLLY RT SEEMS PIL eS NA. ST PLE TIONED SCL MLSS. ? EUMIUNEY ee LITERATURE A AND NEWS. BE Oe a Pa corer en poy aa See = EDWAI LD W LiBLAN] This a true Liberty, when Free- born £2 eM, having tg advise the Public uiay speal free. ——EURIPIDES. [EDITOR anp PUBLISHER. Vou. Vill. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 185s. No. 2U. Sr a ee ae ens tase ~ l, ‘, on Tuesday, 39th inst. A+ the Pavilion Hote AY bad CAaViliv eV le € Valuable seen Farniture, euaiticue. Chinawaro, &c. rave he d to sell by Auction, en instruet WSDAY, rawing-room, Parlour, “URNITURE, Kitchen and Co TC. Ke. Pantryware, Sitting-room and Bed- | | the 30th instant, at the} A Word to tho-Wiso is sufficient. ALL PERSONS INDEBSTED TO THE SUBSCRIBER will take notice, that no coercive step will be taken until after the TWENTIETH NOVEMBER INSTANT, ‘Immediately after which, all unpaid accounts will be x Tern wral. For particulars see Catalogues, to be | Re t} t J. & MORKIS, Auctioneers. { November 15, 1858 LONDOW HOUSE. Established 1820. ceived ex ‘* ISA BEL,” ribers have re from Liver- . ° wares Ot x Hes S vbs ' 0 packa: 3s 0 ve K ted by a member of the Firm, at some of the leading Hous in London, Manchester, cee Birmingham, &e., which, with Steck on hand, and residue “daily expected, will ru the largest and best stock of Goods they have yet had to to their customers and the public. Wholesale dealers ; ied as usual. Present importation consists of— “) chests primeCongouw TEA 6 do bik. & col’d Cobourgs | 200 packages Ironmongery G do sorted Dress Stuffs and Liardware niet t do Haberdashery 1d trunks HOTS AN 1 Ss! ocs 1 do Llosix TV ; cases Ready-made Cloth’g 4 do Townend’s Hats and j xules P - ilangings Caps ’ im © 1. Warp 1 do Gloves, (Dent, Alcroft 5 i vl Milriins w Co's } t do + { 2 do Press Trimmings t odo Wit ; ide 1 do Bonnets & Straw llats | & da Ss Carpets and 1 .do FURS Woolens 2 do Fur Caps do Cloths 3 do Dress Silks, Velvets &| il dv Guia Piaids and Silk Goods llinseys 2 do Glazed Linings lito W ine 7 -do Sundries t 5 tons Bar TRON Barrels Perter, Ale, ground ze Hes Spring & Axe Stee! Logwood, Redwood, Currants 125 b ;Tondon SOAP Boxes Raisins, Black ike: Pipes, 4 hhds. Paint OIL Starch, Washing Powder, &e GO kegs PAINT Kegs Mustard, bine, Saitpetre Bags Rice, Nuts, Codec, Pepper. D.. G. & S DAVIES. harl ir 8, 1858 T3437 - gm fy, TY tT £2 tt rs = ~— WwEW BWI ws 3! at 24 iv reve ODS Gl 1Sg0W Eouse, Queen Streot, ’ ,and now offered to Town and Country buyers “ash system ol \ i { SMALL PROFITS AND QUICK SALES Staple Manufact 3 of all kinds Ladies’ D r00ds, In gr at variety Londo [anties and Shawls D vs. Embroideries. Laces, &c hivoo rio rs, noroweries, 1,4CeS, &C. Ladies’ and M * Felt Hats and Ay Lines Coating and Trowserings, Cloakings, Flannels Blankets, Oil Clothes, and Farnieking Goods Hats and Caps, Boots and Shoes ] oe le Clothing, « -@ &e. SMALL WARES and He SBANDR ; —aALso— yY Cat : ee — \f,,! » leas of the best quality, Sugars, Aioiasscs Soaps, Can He SB, Tohace dy Loudon Stareh ly liz . Pipes, ae. &e. : an . ©. ©. VAUX. BE. I., November 8, 1853. Kx.1lm. | f AVANA CIGARS of Superior quality. sued for, without any distinction. JAMES ROMAN City Hardware Store, Nov. 8, 1858, Cigars! Cigars! Ci gars! Wholesale, at the CITY DRUG STORE, W. R. WATSON. Septer nber 13, 1858, | Dalziel’s Fulling Wills een emer i British and Foreign MERCHANDIZE, | “S now re; lete with ane BN ly New Stock of Pall and W inter | SRITIS!L and AMERICAN DRY GOODS, personally and ~ RE now provided with the most ; improved Falling Machi- nery. and the Subscriber will finish work in the best style , in the shortest possible time. PRICES Falling and Pressing, per yard,...........- 4d, Dyeing Black, Brown, Clarct,........... 10d, SUS Units once dacs asc cos ccs as Cassel ee Pressing,..... is eee eae egeecbasacdin cs ey cme Scouring and Pressing,..... Sees Mant osm: Acrnts :—Hon. P. Walker and Mr. Jas. Watts, Ch. Town. Nov. 8, 1858. 3i JON dD ALZTBL, BROKERS AND GENERAL COMMISSION AGENTS, NO. 6, BROAD QUAY, SWANSEA, S. W. | SPEGS to inform the Merchants and Shipbuilders of P. EK. a “* island that they are ready to receive consignments of | Vessels and Cargoes ‘of Wood, whieh they have every nD | GEORGE HOOPER & CO. - 2 | RIES, jus received i from their connection ia the Bristol Channel, of ¢ ffectic. spe sales; and, should the Vessel not sell to advantage, after havy- | ing tried the whole scope of the Channel. she can take a cargo i of Coat or Tron round to the port she prefers, thereby saving ja vast deal of expense. October 7 7, 1858. Salt, Flour, Cor n-meal & Groceries. “) 500 USHTELS Liverpool SAL’ r. 2°00 Barrels extra Canada FLOUR 100 Barrels CORN-MEAL 100 Bas vs do, i And a choice assortme nt of F amily GROCER | and for sale low 1 eas h only, at BELL'S PROVISION STORE, Market-square. Charlottetow ne Mase 14, 1858. 6m Final Notice. | & LT. persons indebted to the subseriber hy Note of Hand or } 4 Book Account, are hereby notified that unless payment | be made forthwith proceedings will be taken for the recovery i of the same. C: By SMITH. Novetber r, 1858. 3w: | ix wok. 6 ha dss ale A, POD BARRELS No. 1 superfine Canada FLOUR, for sale. wi © inquire at the s tere of A. H. Yates, or at the sub- sriber’s residence, STEPHEN SWABEY. Charlottetown, September 13, 1858. «JOHN A. FOWLE & Co., Commission #iercbants, NO 11 FOSTER’S WHARF, BOSTON, U. Jonn A. Fowte, Sauvern A. Fownr, Boston, U.S. April 26. tf Mh. t wn, P.E.I a JOH IN & ‘SCOTT, KENT-STREET, ROBERT SCOTT, CUARLOTTETOWN, Carriage and Sleigh Builders, &c. &c. &c. © arriag ros and Sleighs always on hand, and built to order, s } for sale at reduced pr ices. Valuosis Freehold Property for Salo. rAVLE ‘ fers for sale FOUR PAS TURE pang r r » the Lower Road leading te York Rive lon t north by a road Jee din: r to the Mal. . with a DWELLING HOUSE, BARN and i Y HOUSE 40 feet long by 20 feet deep, and | g vith ie » of the Lots and a part L¢ rte of cultivation, The,Property | t les from T 1, und is very convenient r id seaweed, Which may be had in abundar | ; . pl One-hali urchase money may be ieft on interest imimediat 3 : will be given. ~ Por i ir particalars enquire of the subseriber, ; JOHN TRENAMAN. Ciuariot wn, Wi i 2d 3i © ABRBIVED JUST WHEN REQUIRED! AND RKECS8IVED AT KK. LING SOU ARE HO Usaz, 23 CASES bOOTS & SHOLS! INCLUDING Ladies’ Rubber Boots and Shoes, Gentlemens’ Rubber Boots and Shoes, Chiid’s, Boy’s and Youth’s Leather Boots, : Mens’ thick common Boots, 1 Women’s Leather Boots and Buskins, &c., &e., comprising an excellent assortment, ? Noy. 8, "1858 lm BEER & SON, Oct be r os , OST !—-On Fri lay } +)iw afternoon, petween three and ar o’clock, within 4 mil from the residence of | Jud re Pet rs, lower Ma ay ‘Ue Rot id, ao wok J Ww hoer rer > vit de liv fer th Same at Dr. JOHNS ON’S Dispen- » satis toils rewarded. , 1853. a will} . Town, October 2 Final Notice. LL amounts due the cl either by Note of Hand or Book Ace punt, if not paid by the + 25th DECEMBER, will be sued for withoutany distinction of pra GEORGE F. C. LOWDEN. C harlott town, Oct ober Zo, 18: 38. 3m TO BE DISPOSED OF BY PRI VATE SALE, Cpr } OF THE MOST VALUABLE A AND wail tifally situated’ properties in this city, having 2 | fatgial reet, together with the .res idence of the Misses Stewart thereon. For partic ulars apply to JOHN BALL. Chariotte: awn, ny Sept. 2, 2, 1893. —_ ————. a -*Bor Sale. wy FEET of 3 inch good quality, fresh cut SPRUCE | I ‘ OOD DEALS, made ready for delivery by Mr, THOMAS | ontague River. Enquire of Bensamin DAviES, Lisqr., ANNEAR, if SUBPUENS & CLARKS, Orwell. Caarlottetow i, or to Orwoll, June 21, 1858. the shortest ni ytiece. Carriz ige and Sleigh Trimming done with neatness and de ‘spatch Now on hand a varie ty of new and second-hand Carriages, ‘The public are requested to call ‘and see them before parvhesing r elsewhere. oe May 3, 38. Grain, Cre in. hest price given for BARLEY and OAT 5 T Ty ti 2 aw Colos’s Browery and Distillery, Constantly on hand at prices cheaper thi Market, the best of Rum, Bra wy Mm he pur- ’ s* chased rm the , Gin, Whi +y, and a superior article of old Malt Whiskey. Also — X, XX, : an nd x XX Ale. Ch. To wn, Feb. 18, 1837. WW BE LE kT for one, two or Tt I oe ' longer te rm, as may be agreed upor e324 STEW AR T,’’ directly opposite Charlot! FF RES about 50 acres of LAND, 24 of whic cultivation. Also,a good GARDEN. Applic: tior hen to the proprietor, W. STEWART, Esq., Liners side of Char- lottetown Ferry, Lot 48. tf July 26, 1858 - Dissolution of Co-Par tnorship. YQX\HE Partnership business heretofore existing and carricd on under the style and firm of WELLS & MILLER, is this day dissolved by virtue of an award to me directed by Ch.Town, August 12 : BAZAAR. wnt of 115 feet on Queen Square, and 154 feet on Graltn, Oct will be sold low for Cash. \ ST received at the BAZAAR, Groat George Street, per 7 Isabel, from England, a large and well-sclected stock of | | FANCY GOODS, Cutlery, Glassware, &c., &c. Stone Martin BOA, | consisting in part of— | Silver Broaches, Scissors, Thimbles Butter Knives, Shawl Pins, &e ; Pearl, Shell, and Scotch Wood, Card ¢ aes top Scent Bottles, Pebble Spectacies, Pearl, She ell, Stag lyory and other Penknives, Garden knives, sia dies’ Com- panions and Reticules (silver and stell furni shed), Leather, Rosewood and Mahogany Desks, Workboxos, Cases, &c., Tourists’ Cases; Britannia Metal Craet Stan dx, with cut Bottles, Meerschaum and other Pipes : Plate Looking Glasses on stands, French and German Looking | Glasses, De la Rue’s Playing Cards, Cut Wine Glasees Engravings (framed and unframed), Whips, ¢ ‘ombe, | Perfumery, Soaps, Hair Oils, and other articles too nu-| merous to mention. Country Merchants and others are respectfully requested to ‘inspect the above Stock, as they will be sold low for Cash. All wholesale orders from the Country promptly attended to. November 1,.1858. lm JAMES McCOMB. UST received, per Schr. “* HELEN,” from New York, and for sale by the subscriber : Barrels extra. and superfine FLOUR, Bags CORNMEAL, Barrels Crashed SUG AR, +} Rifver- October 18, 1853. M. LOWDEN. Literature. . THE LITTLE FEET. Once, when June-time roses came, In cur garden blooming sweet, I one morning in the mould Found the prints of little feet. Two small feet which deftly trod Over beds of Mignionette, All across the Violets blue, And where Peonies were set— None of these had staid the pair, In their light uncertain treed, Till they reached a blooming rose, Fair as Li!y’s own dear head. There the little feet were stayed— ‘Tip-toe prints were left behind, Where she gathered one bright bud, Like her own pure opening mind. Then my heart grew fond to trace All the prints of those dear feet,— And my fancy saw the child, Golden-haired and winsome sweet. These small prints upon the carth Seemed a promise to me given, That my little one should not Over soon be called to heaven. She should walk with maiden grace, — Be a woman in bright bowers,— And her noble feet should walk Over thorns, to find the flowers. Tears were gushing to my eyes— Blessings pouring from my heart, And my lips unconscious cried, ‘© Oh, my child, how dear thou art!’ Years have come and passed away ,— June-time roses as of yore bless the summer with their bloom, But the pretty feet no more Leave their prints upon the earth ;— My two hands the little feet Bound together still and cold, Underneath the winding-shect. sleeps, ins sweet,— ing jair Il know, littie feet. Daisies grow where Lily And the rose-tree blossi Earth is pass Bat 1 miss the Then T close my eyes with tears And aguin the picture trace, | Of the summer long ago, i Gladder made by Lily's face. And I watch the little feet, Allalong the darksome : road,— Down the valley to the gate Of the Paradise of God. And I whisper, ‘‘ it is well, Sometime we again shall meet— For to weleome me in hearen First will come the little fect." — Emerson's or AGT HiOW I KILLED A CARIBOO. TO THE BARKENS. ves »} amninifiate } mninitiated J. W. Morrison, Arbitrator, and Theophilus DesBrisay, | Umpire. GEORGE W. MILLER. , 1858. (RK, Gaz. & Ex x. om. Isl lin.) | Dressing | of the thermometer twenty-five degrees below gero; when I, Anaxagoras Linstock, tourist and ‘philosopher r, left Fr rect It was the morning of the last day of the year; the hands of the clock were indicating hali-past five, and the quicksilver rie- : en = ; = nee resources against garotte. He is dressed in the ivariable blanket-coat of his nation, adorned with many-coloured stripes at the hood and borders, and with red cloth inlaid at the seams; and confined at the waist by a belt supporting a hunting-knife sheathed in moose-hide, and a tomahawk ; coarse canvassy continuations lead to terminations of ei in colour and consistency like wash-leather and his , once of otter-fur, but now of little more than otter-siz, see oms not so Warm or so important a part of his bend-gear as a confused mass of black hair which hangs from nade it to his shoulders, in the style of an unkempt Charles the First. You imay travel wany a day and through many’a land, without seeing a wilder figure than my companion to the Barrens. . Anything equal to the cold of that morning I had never felt. There was a driving, cutting wind with it, which no amount of blanket-coats or buffalo-robes could resist ; and we, the three human members of the expedition, were glad to pack ourselves and the inanimate of our company into as close a mass as we could on the bottom of the sled, which was simply a long flat ‘wooden tray, mounted on a pair of clumsy- -wooden skates or runners. For myself. [ squeezed my feet under the brandy-pitcher, as the euly thing unlikel: to freeze, and found the thick woollen vizor of my cap utterly inadequate to prevent a frozen faeo, till itself froze into e hard consistency impervious to wind, and proved that even ice can sometimes be productive of warmth. Letter, however, for this end than fanuel or fur, or even ice was Will Doherty’s never-ceasing stock of songs and anecdotes, and hearty good humour; and the crisp morning air of the woods rang with our duet of music and Jaughter as we plenapes the heavy drifts—a duet to which the sbrill jingling f the sled-bells and the dull groaning of the runners through their furrows, added a not unp!casant bass and treble obligato, but which was scldom augmented into a trio by a sound from Joc, who has with the name dropped the * wild-goose ”’ propene sities, and is now the most taciturn of his tacitura race, gifted with a stoicism which refused to relax into a seatle at our most stirring joke, or into more than three pithy words, with at least a semicoln between cack, in auswer to our wiost personal appeal. fier narrowly escaping immersion in crossing a river on oe rotten with the snow, we arrive about noon at the hut of the last settler 10 our direction, whose fold is oftener visited by bears than his hut by man, and who is proportionately ‘xcited at our approach. Tere the road ends; if indeed an opening through the trees along which we have journeyed 50 far —freer, it is true, from fallen timber aud such obstructions from the rest of the forest, but covered with unbeaten snow varying from two to five or six fect in de pth,-—can be digni- fied with the name of rond. Wil Dob erty is to leave us ‘ now ; so Joe produces our stores, and we give him a parting foast, ent short by his hurry to retura to meet his sweetheart ata ball with which the choice spirits of Frederiction are purposing to welcome in the New Year; and even Joe is seduced into something which may be construed into a smile as we drink the last of many stirrup- nee tO so inspiring a toast as this information affords us; while Will himself, ia language which shows that, whatever may be his ideas of the marriage oath in particular, he has at least studicd the nature and variety of oaths in genoral—voms bis determination this very night to take my advice and the opportunity of popping the question. Lt was a wonderful change from the laughter and noise of Will's de parture to the heavy, silent tramp through the lonely bush, which formed the continuation of our ; journey. Joe bad transferred all our stores toa “ treboggin,” which is to a sled what a wheelbarrow is to a wagon, and was hauling them rad him ou the snow; while I marohen first, to * make tracks ” or beat down the snow wiih my snoW-skoes, s0.as to give an easier furrow to the treboggin. It is no easy work, the first attempt to walk_on soft, yielding snow, e ach foot carrying with it its own flooring in of a snow-s! hoe; and I varied the m onotony of our first har naps fon: ae srunswick, in the following aeaneee ans he our "5 tramp wit h an oceasional frantic head-foremost plunge pany: a Red Indian; twelve pounds of similarly-coloured into the’ snow, where I would. stick last, Sn and ition Aileen f eizht of pork, sixteen of bi-cuit, one of tea, and six Of hat of the man who attempted to walk high and dry across j sugar ; one genes of ni andy, tins of mustard, pepper, $06 | oo atk aaiice on his fect, and discovered his sustake hy | Kev lorty potatoes : . a3 many onions ia frying-j in, @ wee inding himself hanging by his heels perpe: adicularly into the Kee — ud tw 9 “tots : or tin cup > a rife, a fowling -} lece, water. I was pai wy ly conscious of e@ uiting a most ridiculous 3 ;' - eens ene oe oa) i. gure each time that Joe, with a promptitude worthy of the uw renee cere Oar dest! pival | Hunan ay cicty’s medal, hauled me out of that self- it ity m les ‘ ite throug h the as zg ave by the blanket-coat which formed niy shroud ; bus . 1 109 Ti, Pen ee Dyeek LOL a Fi dieuk ae isa relative term, and Joe would supply no : . aughtering or and Lam bound to state that, by word or © Caribe 16) whic h “[ should premise, for the benefit of the ag : : oe : Cariboo is zof the sume aa a Caribee, and , that a as not purposing hich I may have feit for my Imiian ally by aidin i that I g him in a! ! we us as yet bioodthirsty expedition against a hostile tribe, | but an undeveloy ling to Cooper, a I ry stage of the character, that of i | Deerslayer; and my thirst was but ny 4 . relinina | Cuvier, commonly called the Cariboo, | Let me introduce my Indian—Awahwas, or “ The Wild | Goose ;” named pro e of the blood royal of the Meleccets, and heir-presumptive to the dignity of the “ Sargum,” or chief; a lineal descend- ant of the ancient Delaware dynasty, of which tribe the gook, junior branch of his royal race. | good Catholic, and his g \a new name in his baptivm. These functionaries scem to have been selected in equal measure { fro m rej sresentatives of a each language prevalentin those parts, Frese ib: Koglish, and Awahwas, however, is a | Indian; and two names ouly being orthodox, to have settled | g claims of nomenclature by distorting ” what in plain Bas glish is Joseph | ather a short fizure, , ; their three contendix ‘inte * Susep Plancois, | Francis. Joe, as he is always calicd, is r isiim, thin, and wiry, but not ungracefu id. Every jlimb gives a hint ef the most india-rubber agility, while bis | face, “and a rather disproportionate solidity of ‘chest and | shoulder, suggest the somewhat contradictory faculty of dogged and strong endurance. His gingerbread com plexion | ra « } . ALY forme and paxticglarly ugly features have been crue lly denied by | nature the means of biding any part of them, but wear a composure waich would be dignified in spite of ugliness and» ees were it not for the cunnivg twinkle of his 2% listening little eye, betokening quah ties which are bighly HBleasant to contemplate as allies against the race of Cariboo, If one | ‘met those eyes ina retired ugl'sh lane after sunset, one | round | would instinctively make a mental roll-call of one’s available | ‘lay with boughs of the red cedar, wuich arc to ecrve us for ‘but which one would rather not make enemies of. to prove any of the entente cordiale | ped Hawkeye, being only in what is, accord. | or the blood of the | | Reindeer of North America, the Tarandus of Buffon and | bably from some youthfal frivelities. He y | | Meleceets are an offshot; and I take Uneas and Chingach- | immortalized by Cooper, to have belonved to but aj‘ god-fathers and godmothers gave him | jcorremtive to it ; ‘deed, inten unintentional, i never more signally \failed in rousing anybody's amusement, than [ did in the ease of this bronze-visaged savage—bronze ia colour and fix dness—for whom would altered hig ion of the Indian Chief, and have written— t, a tional or have | descript A stoic of the woods, @ man without a grin. Sach a silenee it was! broken only by an oceasional report like t he crack of a rifle. “ What that nose?” | inquired ‘ally of Joe the first time I heard it. “ Ob! cold, you know; stick ; bust,”’—which is Joe’s way of expressing that some enormous pine has cracked with the frost. It is | wonderfal what ease and lightness of voice one seems to feel in the genera! hush and the rarefied air 5 a sensation of con- idiomatic ‘sciousness that one ean be heard a mile off, which would be | particularly pleasing to a popular preacher. A squirrel ‘now and then struck in wit h a chatter; bat L think f heard lone bird only during the entire weck, “ Cheepwees ” is Joe's ‘answer to wy inquiry, —* what bird that, Joe 2?” which word | { have since discovered to be simply the Meleeect for * bird,” so L presume the specimen in question had not beeu further ela-sified by the naturalists ef his tribe. On we toil all the afternoon in the same order of march guided only by marks of previous saaatioaie on and far between, biazed on the trees, and by the sagacity of Joe, ese hunting grounds bejore, but who 'who has never been toth [can see nothing but trees and we sbali sees an Indian path where snow. Bets have been made at Fredericten that never reach the Barrens, but doe assuntes an air of royal superiority in answer to my doubts; still, im spite of his as- | surance he is at fault once or twice, and has to leave his treboggin to my hauling, while he makes ingenious casts 1 hit the road off again. | About twilight Joe suddenly stops, with, “ I guess eamp here.” Itisa Y bad place for a ‘aight’s halt, not being near a brouk, but Joe doesn’t know where to look for one, 80 we ‘are fain to reconcile ourselyes to the idea of melted snow for Joe selects 2 spc ot under two branching pines, away the our cuisine whence, wih shoeshoes for shovels, we scrape snow for the space of about cight feet square, banking it up the outside; half of this space Joe instructs me tu for