CR Cie ee te — S3 had not deemed it right to tell Marie of this affliction, ard commeet ts They had Katrine had remained with her in their absence. gone to Carl (she was told,) who had fouud some traces o! Eric. After he had seen his brother, Ernst went back to Rome, at the urgent solicitatiqn of their mother, who begged him to ” ® e . , » 4} . . at efor y ie : return to Katrine and Marie, and make the best story me he r remaining be hind, Boje could to the latter to account for h - the mother and the good priest watched besi le the bed of the sufferer, Nothing could induce Curl to take any rest. lie shared the night vigils and the anxious cares. of tue poor mother. He nursed his friend with all the tenderness of a woman. For days the struggle between life But it did not last lone. He would Live, t then Katrine told Marie all. When Eric opened his eyes to consctousness, they gazed upon the loving face of the mother who bent over him. They closed again in quiet joy. llenever asked how she came there; he was content to know that she was with him. His first words were to Car} > h ’ there ? and death went on. icy said. Aad ¥ asked why Ernst was not ) Carl could not uncer were all in Rome. He could not think why he took it so 2 . . | : - , . quietly that his mother wes with him, At last, when she waa out of the room, he teld Carl how he had met Marie on his way to the quay, to look after the marble, and how he had fled at once. When he was sufficiently strong to he remaved, an easy Enelish carriage was sent from Rome for bim, "He was 4 4 . . ~ ‘ . taken, at his own desire, to his owo lodsings. Th a few days, he regaived so mu ‘+h ostrengh, that’ his mother ventured fo tell him that Menst was in Rome, “ with his wife Katrine.” She saw that she had done we i} to use precaution ‘ . 73 eRe em ee tae SIRS PETAL LENE OLED Te Sa gt ind Tjuran, extending to an | en arm of the Georgia. : : banefits spoken of eoat resalts are anticipated, and immense bed Nts Spoken Ofy Wi. Yr (iii tar i ; a 25 ‘ Fon ae Pninating M the .\ohawasaen Bay ‘ ’ : : . tral ridge of islands, Lak tres ifs water ross t esuntry! and GOnfheét With the River Ohawa. The G ‘ ° ; , is v1 rtak Above the Georgian acerue from this great undertaking. we SOF} : ee ee | Ba into the northern portion of Huron, divided by its cem- | able and even necessary exception, where, In any Dictionary | i‘ ” isl Nipissing by the* French River | \ water communication from Huron via! Meoneh River and Lake Nipissing, is said to reach far} rHE EXAMINE R4 ce ores a + . - a _ - ; —x een Insureictrion In Switzentanp.—aAn insurrection took At the same time place on W ednesday in the Canton of Neufchatel, The er ‘of the insurgents wes—‘ Vere le Rio!” The authoritig, are in the power of the insurgents. This rising is no d - ~~? in favour of the Jong-standing claims of the King of Pruse: of the English language, they can find the word ‘ paliation.”’ | {9 the territory of Neufchatel. The royalists seized — ‘Tired of directing attention to the numerous blunders which | Chateau, arrested the Councillors of State, and hoisted the The Neufchatel telegraph was cyt, At tian name of the famed grammarian is Lindley, not Lind/y, as this itstrvedor in two instanees spells it. he might ask of the scholars, with the aforesaid very justifi- . * . ; , oe © are to be seen in almost every line of this precious letter, we | Prussivn flag. ’ } i 3 hea TS O . . i (hs y ' ~ } i | western portion of Huron, at its hoad, rogives Mhe wal wa shall omit any allusion to the many which we could still point | Chaux de Vonds, and in the western portion of the Canton the entirely American Lake Michigan, 320 miles long, with | : a ‘ oad hall the population took up arms. ; iapus bay. iuta whieh Lake Winnebago by the Fox! out; and shall close these observations, which already have | According to our latest news the federal troops haye » en. wa 5 seni tien s itt ; ‘ ‘ aan law . ¢ : - sa. ; : . G. River spties. ftovke Michieun with tts a Rs (rreen ae hassumed a length alt wether disproportioned to the suhje et of takeu the town, and the insurgent leader, Count Pourtatig | Win Ve », OF ryt mrTo Turon. Ho nr * ; “eee . . i cs ’ fe ie! nde ake Bs na of Taleo it, by a few remarks on some of the statements contained in it. | has been arrested, . m4 mptios- in avon by the Straits of; His assumption that we were sincere in stating that ho did not Pe TS L. meridian Ves aa i , fa lady Tun. Locky German Lroton.—The favourable terms par weer, ‘“ write like an ignoramus,’’ reminds us of the story of a lady, | ffered by the English Government to the Angel i : t al tiarei Ln AY fon ’ j : i. * of Stafford orreret yy the Bogiuss Governmen » the Anglo-German eric} . mP ner not Tne cr itv o1 Stanord- * . : . lichigan, called the Sa 5 through some raral pertion of the county 0) Stallore-| 7 ooion are attributed, by a Berlin correspondent of . , i i pir , was sh 4 Ke i at the b OI ; 3b coaraecness ol the P araniry. j Brussels Presse, to the influence of the reigning Duke Er in a ate re plontiiul, | > sos course of her ride she eame toa gate on which a little of Saxe-Coburg Gotha (Prince Albert's brother), who strong) ' i jt is oe situ ty }) rion | ; : he fo ec oe 3 es cae ee distely. on seeing her approach, ‘recommended to Prince Albert his former comrades in the The waters have agam narrowed, and Row how on by the oo. ee ee 5” . Qn vs Tnlelaim eemnas f wi wail . ns ny ; cl . Schleswig-Hols'cia campaign, of whom the leg : hokl and beautiful River St. Clair, and by a delta empty i) yyy pod down and opened it. to enable her to pass through. NE Ho ——. Z'00 18 pring). j sia a 4 " i : o at ay ce ew on. a . a he , ie rstund how he knew that they! imke St. Clair, say abeut 6G mules in length and an eqaal nr h. Into Little St. Clair, our River Thames enters at . ° * > ; . ’ . law ° weed ware claawele¢ th: Te the head of navigation, of which this (Chatham) is located. | for your courtesy, which proves very clearly that you were not Aeain the waters narrow in the magnificent River Detroit, and sweep semi-cireularly round the western extremityeof Canada at this point, and from flowing south they now take a north- easterly direction, and flow on in that course te the sca. As they change their course by the River Detroit, they again widen, extending now 63 miles in breadth, and for a distance | : cn ‘ : ' . Sell el ahtn 66 wlarocue.’ There, after of 250 miles onward in length, having an average depth of 15 this ‘‘ poor pedagogue, This is Lake Eric—the most dangerons of nayi- | jjmself. at . ° fathoms only. ' : q paiy com sed, 1 * 2y32 i 7 bh ro 8 a $8 Miuinys ooaun 222 e —-~-— -———- “Well, my lad,”’ said the fair equestrian, ra eneiamnerenaiiatemane ; Napies Paeranina vor War. — Great preparations fp defence (says a letter from Naples of the Ist instant, iy thy. Cologne Gazette) are being made in the kingdom of the Te, | Sicilies. Three months ago all the coumanders of the to the previous estimate of the juvenile’s character as the | fortresses near the Mediterranean were convoked at Nel, ‘letter we have been reviewing affords of our former opinion of [t was not then known for what they were assembled, but it as he candidly enough designates | is now certain that it was to provide for the execution of le | important defensive works on the coasts. The works, in fact, © have already been very actively commenced. Ip the Isle iborn in Staffordshire.’’ “*‘ Thou’rt a liar, I be’s,’’ was the | polite reply, which formed about as satisfactory a refutation cation of all the great lakes, said so to be on account of its want | i . , } . & ’ : “ “or one stateme » makes r ‘not prepared. |» . avin Bras : : of depth. We have now arrived at the foot of Lake Pric. | For one statement he makes we were certainly not prep ‘of Capri too, which it is hoped to render im hie, Since we left far up on the Huron, we have passed rapidly} We aro gravely informed that in Vermont and Massachusetts | works are going forward with extraordinary ardour, irty. with him ; for when he heard that Katrine was Krnst’s wile, | by a section of country one of the most fertile, mést pro- no less than one-third of the population attend the schools! two cannon of the largest calibre have been taken to Gaeta, he tarned white, afd had nearly fainted, « Katrine married to Krust! Mother! Katrine married te Ernst!” « Hush, my son. happy termination. hi =? He has seen you already. with the fever he was with you.” « Ob, mother, mother!” cried Erie, “ where is my noble brother ?’ Krust came in. We know all. Ernst is waiting outside. Will yousee When you were delirious Erie rose to mest him, and fell npon his neck. Long, long the brothers held each other, locked in a! ( ' ml }% cursory synopsis, close embrace. « Aud Marie? When shall I see her?” said Erie. « Now, dear Erie.” ssid Hrnst. Erie received her from the hands of his brother, folded her in his arms, and once | again clasped her to his throbbing heart. And so there was another festa in Arqui. The old priest, who had so tenderly nursed Eric, gave bim and his bride the nuptial benediction at the foot of the very altar, in the very church. Young girls strewed the path of the bride with the brightest flowers of the Jate autumn. And, after the cere- mony, the bride and bridegroom started for Vienna, where Car! joined them at the end of a month. And then all three went to Kronenthal, and spent the winter there. Ernst had his wedding present, and the day that it was hung up over} the mantelpiece in the withdrawing room, there was a grand | party at Kronenthal. Some of the guests did not know but what they liked a small picture of ladies attacked by wolves, quite as well as, if not better than, the large one. ever, opinions were very much divided about that. und Ernst, and Eric, had some capital sport together; and! ichwartz kiiled three more wolves before he went back to! Rome im the spring, with his young mistress ; to whom he| now sppeared to have transferred his allegiance. How-! All shall now have a} ; | portunities as a community. These are absolutely existin; iuets, without the slightest amplification. t conveying its produce to market, as well as commercial ad- vantages, pursued with spirit, energy, ability and pér- severance—having social and educational institutions, together inhabitants—enjoying facilities of shipping, and variously | that there are no eld maids or bachelors in those happy lands ; | duetive—the best adapted to the purposes and pursuits of the) erazien—possessing a salubrious climate, invigorating to its | Now, if this be true, we have the extraordinary implied fact, where batteries are to be constructed. Cannon have also ‘been taken to the coast of Calabria, where more batteries arg a ‘to be thrown up. A Jetter fiom Vienna of the 5th, in the but as a drawback to that, the melancholy but inevitable con- | same journal, states that the hope of inducing the King of clusion is forced upon us, that each married couple have but Naples to make concessions, has been abandoned, for it ig . 4 d oye ; ° . ° ; ae ee : ° with moral and religions inflaences—unsuarpassed if not un-| one child. who must, from the moment of its birth, be quali-| stated from a good source that Daron de Hubner has received equalled by any country on the American continent, if not in the whole world, taking into consideration our youth and op- = The whole of those mighty waters of which we have here had pow parrow into a river of the most ex- | : ‘ ‘ ~ 7? ae i. | qnisitely grand magnificence of any in the western hemisphere, | which ‘' Teacher” asserts asa damaging fact against the Go-| one time “ hepatic disease +; bond is entered into, and immediately thereafter have the ‘solitary pledge miraculously qualified as its progenitors '! | { y . wes « ' dara tr wed . here withe amie kaiin i es fied to attend the schools, and there continue until the conjugal OF lers to return there without visiting Naples. _— _ tp om > Autecep HaLiecinatrion or vue Euperor or tux Preneg, -—The my-terious reports as to the state of the French En. With reference to the statement of his present income, | peror’s health have at length assumed a definite form. At was suspected; at another, *ay hans in the cloha Tia rays ave Y contemplate it. | ‘ ‘ . y er affection of the sping . ” was hinted at: — perhaps in the globe—Niagara. I leaye you to contemplate it. | Lamont, we are surprised, even with the proofs afforded of ullection of the spinal chord” was hinted at; but now it iy i More anon. Yours, very truly, MON PAYS. Che Examiner. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L, SEPTEMBER 29, 1856. | the expense of boarding and lodging the teachers ; and if this | oS SS | the old system he merely received £20, and sometimes only | French Funds may get up again as rapidly os they fell, : roundly affirmed that his Majesty is subject to “ hadlucina- . ee . _ | tions.” If this be all that is amiss with the iustrions to the Government, that they now give him £50, while under | patient, the anxiety of Europe may have a respite, aud the the stupid imbecility of the writer, at his imputing as a fault 9 £15. The present Education Law does not limit the amount, Even “ mad doctors wi!l acknowled ye that hallucinations are merely a sort of hypochondriasis—vulgarly called “hype” —and that, in the worst form, they only amount to mono mania, sometimes harmless, and perfeetly consistent with — 7 . ' to be received from the parents or guardians of pupils, towards | Qe are SS ee | gas could conceal the length of his ears, he might receive from bodily health and an ability to transact ordivary business, ° a . ° ° . ° "1 ‘ } * as! : > » ° ° e es Tue individual signing himself “a District Teacher,”’ whom | that souree as much as he formerly did, although, a’ we said; But Louis Napoleon’s hallucinations have not yet arrived at Tux Examiner deigned to notice on a recent occasion, blundered | before, we do ®ot believe him. Indeed, if we are to place any | into the columns of the Islander for tha second time on Friday, | peliance upon the statement he has furnished, we must con- ° < yf } . ' . * . the 10th instant, evidently for no other purpose than to ease | glude that his ‘ subscribers,’’ that is, ‘* the parents of pupils’’ this point; the most that can be proved against his mental — jheulth is, that he is subject to fits of abstraction :—* The - ‘2 | first attack that was brought under the notice of the court 'took place in the presence of M. Fould, Minister of State, his pigmy soul of its hatred against the Government generally, jtaught by him, do not now hold the good opinion they enter- who, having communicated to him importent documents, and ourselves particularly. inflated bladder that styles itself ‘* a district teacher,’ and to . teach the animal—if not quite too stupid to learn common | has such an exquisite polish as a specimen of English composi- reas . . { ‘ ’ : Jo’ : oa his communication we only tained of him in former years, since they refuse to provide was astounded and frightened to see his master remainin Marl, | noti : : | snonaiialan oni ; : ; ' : Carl,! notice now from a humane desire to let the wind out of this yim with his customary allowance of oatmeal and gaspereaux. | SP‘ echless, gazing or rather staring on vacancy! M. F ran out terrified, telling every one that his master was inane! At that time the attacks Jasted about five or six minutes; | they extend now to halfan hour or more.” It is insinuated The concluding sentence of ** poor pedagogue’s’’ lucubration | Erie bought | deeency and propriety — that before he paradeshis impertinent | tion, and displays such an intimate and critical knowledge of | that the Emperor is under the impression that he is attended a beautiful little villa in the neizhborhood of Arqui. Every | nonsense in the eyes of the publig, he should, if he hasno regard | Lindley Murray, to say nothing of the admissions it contains, by a familiar demon, like Socrates. Napoleon the Great for the reputation of the country for inteljigonce, at least have | that we cannot resist the temptation of transcribing it fur our laboured under a similar ha! lucination, winter they returned to Kronenthal, Carloften joined them hoth there and at Arqui. The last time he was expected in | the nofth, grand preparations were making at the castle, to} receive with becoming honors the blooming young bride he | was bringing with him from the banks of the far otf Thames ; | > ; ‘ : such respect for the class in the community to whigh — a8suya-j readers ;—* It is a singular thing enough,”’ he says, * that , < » ing his signature to denote his actual profession — he belongs, |it happened to be when I returned to pay Mrs. Barrett for as would prevent the disgraceful display he has made of his | eee + Murper ov A Westryan Misetoyany at tnx Cape oF Goop Hore.—Two murders are reported as having been comaiitied beyond the frontier. The first on a Mr. T. W. Raynes, a the generous credit she gave me on the 7th ult., that T got and to whom he wanted to show what warmth of hospitality | own ignorance of the simplest rules of grammar and composi- was to be found in the frost and snow of a Pomeranian | tion, in his most unfortunate endeavour to prove that he does win c . Sn . + - . oes ,not write “like an ignoramus.”? Napoleon the First often mr rare 6 j used the somewhat course expression, that people should wash sight of the Examiner of the Ist inst., for none of them (!) I believe, are taken within my school bounds.’’ We sliould be delighted to hear any of the pupils of the ‘* poor peda- gogue’’ parse the foregoing sentence, and explain away what pianoforte-tuner, a somewhat eccentric character, who had set out from Grahams-town to walk on foot, alone, to Natal. We heard (says) the local journal of his arrival at Alice, where he resided for two or three days, during which he Correspondence. | [roR THE EXAMINER. ] Cuaruam, Canapa West, Ist Sept., 1856, | Drar Examrner,—Far back in the territory monopolized | aud oceupied by these Londom speculators and commercial ad- | venturers, the Hudson Bay Company, and their tail, with such | injurious effect on the best interests ef the British portion of) this continént—the River St. Lawrence rises and flows in various directions and by circuitous routes for a distance: of 3000 miles, and ‘at Tast empties into the Gulf of St. Law-| rence, discharging, it is said, 4,300,000 tons of fresh water | aanually into thesea, receiving, in its course, many tributaries, and passing umder various riames as it alternately spreads into | lakes or narrows into rivers; again far north it rises and flows | down the Riyer Koministeqnoi, and on reaching Fort Char- lotte, empties and spreads into a breadth of 160 miles, and stretches a iength of 430 miles—Lake Superior—627 feet above the sea’s level—1,200 feet deep, and 1.750 miles in circumference. Into this ‘vast expanse of water, it is eon- fidently asserted, that fully 200 creeks and rivers empty, | the small beginnings of each may be considered as so many | suurces.of the St. Lawrence, the one by the River Koministe- quoi being the chief. In this region are immense copper mines, and vast quantities of timber. The mining operations, however, are as yet only in their infaney The timber nearly | untouched. Superior being traversed from its ehief source in| the west to its eastern extremity, now narrows into Tahquam- evuaw Bay, and coming into the rapids of St. Mary, is pre- cipitated down the falls of that river, which, for the purposes of navigation, are surmounted hy a canal-on the American side. , It will he recollected, no doubt, that the opposition charged Mr. Hincks and his confreres in the government of the day with jobbery and venality in the matter of this very canal, Some enterprising Canadian capitalists had pressed on the Canadian Government the necessity for the construction of weanal here on'the Canadian side. Cuntrary to all expecta- tion, Mr. Llineks opposed it-——the proposition was rejected, | and Mr. Hincks was (not without some shadow of reason) ac- cusud of being in league with the Amertean contractors and speculators, in thwarting the Canadian pcoj le in obtaining a canal, much desired in their own territory. Whether Canadian enpitalists and disappointed speculators originated the charge, I-cammot tell. Tt is now, however, pretty generally admitted | that My: Hincks nequitted himseli of the charge of any American bribery in the premises, by the American Canal Company, as had been boldly asserted, Still why our then Canadian ministry was 5° anxious to prevent the construction of so desirable. a national aad valuable improvement on the very best of arrangements, remains to me a matter of sus- picton and mystery. Looking to the fact that owinz to our i‘ayorable position, the estimated expenses of construction | vere mach less than throagh our neighbour's territory, where many more n stural obstacles had to be surmeunted : besides aweumpany woukl have built the canal with government aid, had they obtained a charter, and moreover if the desired to make a Provincial work of it. the Government y certainly had the méans; as our funds at that time “were expended with a lavish hamdi on far le reynun “ative nublie w rks. The witera of this nol Liver St. Lawrenee, after de- som nee the Pat sof St. Mary, spread intoa breadth of 220 Miles, whe ! away south in their onward course, sa P omy a? ; S ' ' cistince of 26) ialles—Lake ‘Luren 388 fhet.above the level +? ” 4 Fi eal ’ 6 ae - : ‘ 3 et ¢ sea, JU0 feet Pp aM 4,48 ) miles in circamference. Hluram is inters b Dy 4s running through its contf. We a “we 3 Hh s tuland aha ‘cata. : wal, Se oh it ioe ee i. hey, iter i Scrat 4 1 =e = ’ ' Ve in islands running nivieahle chinkels 1¥'tw ( ’ i yee ty yy das tunis is ealied ti Néedry Hat. i : mi, receives; through ‘ : meNGS ‘ or Lok? Simcoe, back of Turonto. . ‘ a : oe «t (OBR Las Doe jt £09 22 2uruuls @ iA Ke MCS, to their dirty linen at home, when he deprecated any unseemly exhibition of faults which should have never been made public. Thus it is with this ‘‘ Teacher,” who, if one may judge from the effusion we are noticing, is not even as well qualified for his office as she ; ‘ Who taught the child to read, and taught so well, That she herself by teaching learnt to spell.” Before we shall have done with this worthy, we shail prove the truth of our proposition. We shall begin with the beginning, as Sancli Panza recom- | eggs, &c., so hazardously given to him on tick. With respect | of t] _to the latter assertion regarding the rarity of the Examiner | goyastated the frontier a few years ago, expressed himself in terms of sanguine hope as to the successful appears to our poor comprehension three of the most startling | termination of his arduous task. He had been furnished by’ blunders that were ever perpetrated in an equal number) the Rev. Mr. Hepburn, Wesleyan minister, at Fort Beaufort, of words. With regard to the admissions referred to, we| With letters of introdaction to the respective missionaries at : the several mission stations_on his line of route, by whom : e . ‘there can be no doubt he would have been kindly received on her luck in getting her money — thought that it was) sq hospitably entertained. - He seems to have passed thr ‘* singular enough”’ that this gentleman should have refunded ; | British Kaffraria in safety, the seene of the murder being In and we presume the good old lady would make no objection to | the Amagaleka country, inbabited by tribes which have his paying ‘‘ for the credit,” so long as he paid for the ham and | 8!V¢" the a gy! and the Imperial Government a great dest ‘of trouble, and which Has afforded refuge to the most desperate. ie Hotteutot rebels, who, in conjunction with the Kafirs,’ He was quite have no doubt that Mrs. Barrett — whom we congratulate 3 > + : ron » ty sporerest ‘ he ce mi | . - . . . “Wr . mends, and in doing so, venture to suggest to the gentleman | yithin the bounds of” his school — (we suppose the booby! unarmed, and reported himself to have about £15 in bis who does not ‘‘ write like an ignoramus,”’ that the * apt! quotation’? at the head of his letter is not to be found in tl plication to Mr. Ings, whose extensive reading of the pocts, and accurate perception of their beauties, qualify him to be a | ‘from the exceedingly low standard of intelligence wrich his writings of any author but himself, as he may discover on ap- letter indicates ~ that the ‘district teacher” had but.eeldom read the columns of this or any ether respectable journal.. meant his school district) — we cannot have the slightest doubt, pocket. The other victim to the brutality of the Kafirs is the | Rev. Mr. Thomas, 2 Wesleyan missionary, the circumstances’ 'of whose death are as follows :--Some of Mr. M. B. Shaw's people stole horses from some of Faku's people. The latter complained of the theft to Col. Maclean, during bis late visit We have one word of advice at parting for the especial) to the territory of this chief, and this officer directed, or fitting counsellor to the ** Teacher’ in any literary question. benefit of our “ poor pedagogue.” Preserve your incognito desired, that compensalion should be given to the parties” We next hear of a “ Government effervescent editorial.’’ Without stopping to admire the correctness of the term, as applicable to our previous article, we are willing to take it as an acknowledgment of the contrast between our editorials and | | those of the Js/ander, which are as “ flat, stale and unprofita- i we fear your imbecility is sufficiently intense to drive you to the | Wood station for protection. ble’’ (except to Duncan Maclean) as ditch water. ‘* Teacher’? | says: ‘1 touched éiem on the raw,’ > it ¥ ‘ wt aw 7 . % Sabla Be Bi j a 39 2 . a tinues, * why have recourse to fables and falsehoods. Did | ly, to wear the dunce Ss cap, and be whipped more regularly <<pe@ by all means; foras an obscure and unknown scribbler you, Wwithoué informing his) superlatively silly letters we have done you the honor to notice, ' ee } readers who the unhappy raws might be, —*‘ else,’’ he con-| the _ the ‘robbed. These parties accordingly went to Mr. Shaw’s {place to receive compensation, but had to leave without ay with i ity give ve » inherent baseness of your | P°°°° . . ro may with impunity give vent to the in Your receiving any. Owing to this circumstance a commando of disposition, and afford an admirable exercise to your vulgar | Faku’s people was called out to attack Mr. Shaw’s natives, and cowardly attributes. But if you are stupid enough — and | who, on hearing of their intention, fled to the Beecham The missionary there was /summoned to appear when the attack was made, and on his ‘receiving the first wound, and cailing out who he was, he | was met by the remark, “ Why do you harbour thieves ?” and public will point you out as the fellow who ought, constant-| was then stabbed again, when he fell mortally wounded, commission of any rash act—to blab that you have written the ->> the booby ever know any one who believed fables to be literally and severely than the hapless children foolishly placed under} Larssr From Turkey.—Consrantinopue, AvG. 25,—The true? The sentence in which the above extract appears is so | your birchen sway. broken and dislocated, that it is not merely ‘* Priseian’s head a little seratehed,’’ but Priscian’s head broken into very small pieces indeed, and the brains knocked out most effectually. As to the figures our worthy gives to show the comparative | here on Friday, in the Mail Steamer Lady le Marchant, from yas . : . . ys el etik s . of 4 ° emoluments of his present situation and his former one, pre- | Pictou. We give in our present No. all the news which vious to the advent of the Free Education Act, we ean only | pear to be important. say, that we should like:a little better proof, as to the correct- ness of his figures, than the mere dictum of a fellow whose | moral training appears to have been as sadly neglected as his | intellectual one. In fact we have no hesitation in defying him to prove the trath of his statement. We have next *‘ a wilful | perverdion of facts,”’ yet, he *‘does not write likean ignoramus.”’ Ife seems to consider that he merited the gratuitous, a now-clearly proved, undeserved compliment which we paid | him when we charitably said that “* this teacher does not write | of the province, an outlet of the commerce of Shangiae, on is to be entrusted to the Madras army. ; /quiet, and our forces there are to be reduced, ms 8) Canning is at Caleutta in improved health. diplomatic relations between Turkey and Russia have beea i antiink renewed, On Saturday last M. de Boutenieff went down LATEST FROM EUROPE. = his aren! at parenatent ener he has taken up his resi-_ Enclish Mail, with date ca “eq uence, to the Porte, and paid his visits to the Ministers, Tas English Mali, with cates to tho -14th.dénionh) eetiwe _beginsing with Fuad Pasha, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, to whom he gave a copy of his credentials as well as of the *P~' notification of the Emperor Alexander's accession, of which he was the bearer. It is a singular coincidence that the new. | Russian Minister had thus to renew the relations, with the | Ottoman Government through the medium of the very person ‘whom Prince Menschikoff first slighted on his arrival, by that foreed to resign. As becomes diplomatists, the interview was very friendly, political subjects being, as if by mame | common accord, avoided, except in a single instance, whem ude is perfectly M.de Boutenieff thanked Fuad Pasha for the indulgence, Viscount |shomn to Russian merchants during the late regretab!e events. NEWS BY THE MAIL FROM ENGLAND. Toe Overrtanp Mart.—In India a treaty is in course of negotiation with the Momuud chiefs, hitherto the only dis- turbers of the peace on the Punawallah froutier. Barmah + Tux Svopession 1o tue Tunone or Grevce.—The negotiations with respect to the succession to the throne of The Chinese rebels took possession of Souchou, the capital | Fi ie eel alia SD Pq LF ae oye | the 6Othof July. Forty vessels of the imperi oliDaio, : : : . as if he were an ignoramus. We regret that he should have y I y vessels of the mperial fleet’are cooped Grecee (says a private letter from Munich of the 28tk ult.) so ungratefully but thoroughly disproved our assertion, whic the eubject of it should have so rashly rushed into print to | prove that le had no claim to it. We have, among other | curivus specimens of orthography, a most melancholy display | of ignorance on the part of this ‘+ teacher,’’ forhe does not even kuow how to spell the name of the author of the text book of grammar in his own sehool.. He will find./on asking Hie'..f 130 vhiette sree hi shans ‘nnn at ee Wild any O: his pupius— excep, pernaps, one of his own children, 4, in that case, stupidity may be hereditary —that the Chris- ~ ' s ry’ > j a . ” ; > . , |Up near Nankin. The American house of Wetmore and have been es . a ; : - ‘Company has suspended payment. re made rely as a conve irtesy 9% e g : we made merely as a conventional courtesy ;and regret that | poi, has been killed b of the people is fixed on emigrating. arried on with activity since the arrival of King In addition to the three proteeting Powers, Austria, ‘as a near ally of our royal family, takes part in : |negotiations. The recent interview between the Kings Disasters At Sr. Hetena.—The little, but historieally Greece and Bavaria at Aschaffeusburg was for the purpose famous, island of St. Hclena, appears to be suffering under a | of agreeivg on au identie note to be addressed to the Courts plethora of population. In consequence .of the depression of England, France, and Russia, to express the views of which trade has lately suffered there, a large proportion of King Otho resjeciing the adoption of a Catholic prince as its inhabitants have been reduced for some time past to a his successor. Prince Adalbert of Bavaria and his young Wes lak # ee core employment being Very scarce, COUESOTS are daily ex pec ted here, and the ivtention of that Nu hope seems-to be cntertained of a remedy, but the aliention prince in reference tu the throne of Greece will then be wade | public. : Mr. Howard Cunning- | Qi ho. y Chinese. ss