» ; AW Che Cram KEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, UWer. LITERATURE AND NEWS, WEST END OF GRAFTON STREET, RW SALE at the above Establishment— io : 100 Sides Neat LEATHER, 200 Calf SKINS, 200 Sides City, and Country Slaughtered Sole LEATHER, a $00 Sides Buones Ayres Sole LEATHER, to be ready New Year's ; N. B. CASH paid for GREEN HIDES. ALso WANTED IMMEDIATELY, a quantity of HEMLOCK BARK, for which Cash will be paid on delivery at the above Estab!is hment. Charlettetown, Dec. 13, 1858. Mon & Pro ane AT GLASGOW HovUssE OU will find CHEAP, FOR CASH— Ladies’ Polka JACKETS Ladies’ MANTLES in all styles Ladies’ Chenille Neck Searts French Flowers and Plumes . Children’s Felt HATS, with Feathers to match Stamped W ork, a few handsome French Embroideries Maslin Collars and Sleeves Head Dresses, Dress Caps Ladies’ Press Goods in great variety Pomenian, Mountain, Martin & Musquash BOAS & CUFFS. —ALSO— BOUTS and SHOES, &e. &e. ©.C. VAUX, Queen-strect. December 13, 1858. lm ; BATTING! BATTING! ECEIVED at ** GLASGOW HOUSE,” per Afton, from Boston— a Superior BATTING, Black and White WADDING, White and Unbleached Cotton, Flannala. December 13. lio C.C. VAUX, Queen-street. mee NEW AND IMVYPROVED NOVA SCOTIA COOKING AND OTHER STOVES. —— eer UsT ARRIVED, an assortment of New and luproved iv batantia! COOKING and other STOVES, strong and s warranted Nova Scotia castings—and not Yankee—with large | Metal Boclers, to suit Farmers, and ade to save wood and time, so valuable at all seasons. Wili be sold at the manu- facturer’s prices this season, in order to establish the quality and advantayes v hy} f the Agent for this Isla “PATRICK S t operati m at the Store Orwell, Db ‘coin rT Be vd, LTEPHENS. a Tt. SmAtTwIa STOVES! STOVES!! VEMIE Subserib 1 per Schr ** Mary,’’ from Yarmouth Nova Seo ia Farmers’ Cooking SLO ss of th Iron Boilers) and Box STUY Es, a oOetter articie tian ever * has just receive was imported int Cuts m rk Parties wisine to puree Stoves had better cnt and sec before they purcaase elsewhere, as they cannot fail to give satisfaction. . - me HEYMAN J. P. TERLIZZICK. December 13, 1853. Im PHB ERE WARSHVESA, lil Cat? -. styles and inmost fashionavie r - rr Ty TT FURNITURE f t atest variety and best quality from the grt atest variety anu , i ae 2 : e. exhibited in Charlottetown, of WALNI e, MA BOGAN and PAINTED FURNITURE, -censistieg of much more than herein enumerate 1— Tete-a-tetes , that has ever been + Chomber Sets > ’ Sofas Cott:ge Bedsceads Parlor do Bed-sofas French do Penibrook Go Lollings Boy’s Beds teads Side do Lounges Cribs in trun Card ao 4s ~ : , ; “ak 2 a Uttcmans Cradics Toa} 'y + Arm-Chairs Clothes Driers Toilet ao : , , 326d WT nelle iy Fasy-Chairs ‘Towel Stands Ladies’ Work do ar ay; 1, . ’ ; a Sewing do Washstands MW indo Cornices . 7 ur: : i ; 7 Rocking do Bureaus W indow oe - Nurse do Sinks Patent window Rollers Cord and ‘Tassels Crickets VY ardrobes J Son yk Cases Neeumbent do Drawing do Cane-back arm do Mattrasses Cane-back Rocker doLooking Glasses : ' hs Cane-back Nurse do Looking giass i lites Ladies’ Dining do Picture Frames : Oo ee . oe Tay Office do Gilt Moulding Rotary do Writing Desks Chair Cushions Extension Tables — c#- Please call and examine. aay wd GEORGE DOUGLAS. dri tind ad Kent-street, December 13, 1855. fins All kiads Furniture made to order Orders promptly at- tended to. Flour, Molasses, Loathor, Tobacco, &e- UST received per Brigantine Afton, and for sale at the lowest CASH prices :— 500 Barreis Extra superfine FLOUR 100 do fa:uily do 150 Sides SOLE LEATUER 15 Casks Cider VINEGAR, a good article 30 Boxes LTQOBACCO Be oe 15 Puancheons MOLASSES 50 Barrels No. | Pilot Bread 50 Coils Manilla a le CEPERO- in, Tar, Pitch, Oil Suits,ac. we. Dee. 6. ant “es “ "SAMUEL A. FOWLE & Co. NEW SPORE! 5 cases Matches British Warehouse Queen’s Square. i) “e-eommenced buiness in the pre- fEMIE subscriber, having re-commenced buiness in & P mises formerly occupied by Mr. Janoine McLean, ante the earliest opportunity to inform his friends and the public generally, that he has just r evived per shiy Liverpool, his FALL SUPPLY of BRITISH DRY GOODS, Suited to the season. —ALso— 72 Chests TEA, 6) Half chests do., 100 Boxes SOAP, 10) Bags RICE, bale Porto Rico and Crushed SUGAR, Currants, Raisins, Pickles, And superior Salad Oil, rn which will be suld at the lowest prices for Vasa. a WILLIAM BROWN. Charlottetown, October 21, 1858. large assortment Staple GOODS, Ready-made Clothing, | these Valuable Stoves—these being among | the first importation to this Island. Can now be seen in] at Orwell. | » best quality, (with Cast | oe . . oe ee ee a N°: is your time to suit yourselves with the very latest | Drawieg-room Tables | Parlor do W ihatnots Settees. — , Wore ft “ay a6 a | Carpet-seat do Hat-stands Cas on4 — ~ ese d ’ . rina ry »¢ Reception do Commodes All kinds repaire Renainted & U pholstery i s » Isabel, from | | COUNTRY STORE Inthe Island---Established 1842. VTE St BSCRIBER has selected and just received Ex ‘* EMMA,” from Hanieax, the largest and best | STOCK OF MERCHANDIZE, ,—-to suit the season, and low prices to suit the times—that he , has ever imported, which has been selected from some of the most extensive houses in the numerous trade, who give all the advantages of the trade to their old customers. The following are some of the Goods now open for inspection and sule: | Prime Tea, Sugar, Molasses, Rice, Raisins, Currants and Figs. DRY GOODS in great variety, and some Ladies’ Dresses, latest London style; Ladies’ Capes, new style and low price ; best ready-made Clothing ; Fur and Cloth Caps, of new shape, naval and military, &. ; some first quality Buffalo Robes, very cheap; Boots, Shoes and Rubbers, all sizes and prices. HARDWARE, Cutlery and Jewellery ; bar, hoop, sheet and plate [ron ; Nails, Spikes, Brads and tacks, iron, zine | and copper ; Oils, Varnishes, Brushes, Glass and Putty; i Drugs, medicines and Dye stuffs; burning fluid and lamps ; China, Glass and Earthenware, in great variety, and low prices; Sled and Cart Harness ; Upper and sole Leather ; barrels and half barrels prime Labrador inspect- ed Herrings, Codfish ; Guns, Pistols, Powder, Shot, Caps and Flints; Plough-mounting, and extra sole and side plates ; Pots, Bake-pans and extra lids; with various other articles, too numerous for “ the printer,’’ and will be sold at very reduced prices, for cash, or good Produce. Farmers and others in want of the best description of Goods, will please call and examine quality and price, which will be | found to ensure satisfuction, having every article priced, in | plain figures, for the child as well as the most experienced, } from which no alteration will be made, which has been a fixed rule in the establishment for the past sixteen years, and which | has obtained for if such extensive patrenage. ig A Cargo of Teaber and Deals for Sale—when disposed of, an alteration will be made inthe lumbering business for the | future ; which willenable the proprietor to attend more strict- ily to his connter trade, and vive satisfaction to his customers. | WANTED. from 200 to 300 OX and COW HIDES, for | which the highest market prices will be given. PATRICK SLEPHENS, Orwell Store, Cheaper than the Cheapest on the Island. | Dee. 13, 1858. | BIFY GHOSSRY, | NORTH SIDE OF QUEEN-SQUARE. Wa3} PQ5 #£ aii, 1358, J UST RECELVED per + Vicroxta ”’ from [anirax, and for sale by the subseriber:— ffhds Suear Tea in varicty Blacking Molasses Superior Coffee Tohaceo Jamaica Rum iicty Cigars — t. Puns b't ‘trong Spirits Uheese = Digby Herrings ltihds Liviland Gin Rice i best Cocnac Brandy Crushed Sugar | -eotch Whiskey —~ Sweet Oil |P.E.T. Malt do Pale Seal Oil Common Whiskey Salad Oil Syimond’s best Port Spices Soap ‘ ’ Candies Washing Powders Baking do Patent Medicines | Wine | Sherry Wine | Madeira do Champagne Edinburgh Ale Pale Ale London Porter Shelled Almonds Confectionary Burning Fluid Brushes Cash paid for good clean Timothy Seed. HUGH FRASER. merous to mention. November 29, 1858. ly ° - ‘ TT.27 | LONDOWS 1.0US& Established L820, } > ¥ rT . se . | FE T1E Subscribers have received ex ‘*‘ ISABEL," from Liver- pool, upwards of 690 packages of British and Foreign MERCHANDIZE, isalected by a member of the Firm, at some of the leading | Hfouses in London, Manchester, Glasgow, LDirmingham, &c., | which, with Stock on hand, and residue daily expected, will 'furm the largest and best stock of Goods they have yet had to loffer to their customers and the public. Wholesale dealers ‘supplied as usual. Present importation consists of— | 120 chests prime Congou TEA 6 do blk. & col’d Cobourgs 200 packages Ironmongery 6 do sorted Dress Stuffs | and Hardware 4 do Haberdashery 10 trunks Boots and Shoes 1 do HLlosiery 5 eases Ready-made Cloth’g 4 do Townend’s Hats and 10 bales Paper Dangings Caps 7 do Cotton Warp m 1 do Gloves, (Dent, Alcroft 4 do Striped Shirting & Co 8.) 4 do Grey Calico ‘ 2 do DressTrimmings | 4 do White & printed do 1 do Bonnets & Straw mats | 8 do Scotch Carpetsand ~ 1 do FURS | W oollens 2 do Fur Caps | 3 do Cloths 3 do Dress Silks, Velyets & ; 1 do Gala Plaids and Silk Goods | Hinseys 2 do Glazed Linings | 1 do Wadding 7 do Sundries | 4 cases MILLINERY i ugumaiumgita Barrels Porter, Ale, ground Logwood, Redwood, Cu rrants Boxes Raisins, Blacking, Pipes, | 5 tons Bar TRON 2 | 9 bundles Spring & Axe Steel 1195 boxes London SOAP Sins, ns ds, Paint OLL Starch, Washing Powder, ke | 60 kegs PAINT Kegs Mustard, Blue, Saitpetre | > aahe - Bags Rice, Nuts, Coffee, Pepper. ; D., G. & S. DAVIES. Charlottetown, November 8, 1858. , - BAZAAR. - @hristmas and Now Yoaz’s Presents. FRILE greatest yaricty of FANCY GOODS in the Eastern Provinces is to bo found at the * BAZAAR,’’ Great George street, consisting im part oit— i | Broaches ; Rings; Earrings; Pencil Cases, Ke.; silver Scissors ; Stilettues; Butter Knives; silver-top’d Bottles; C locks : Watches; Backgammon Boards ; Chessmen > i lutineas : Accordeons ; Concertineas ; Violins ; Desks ; W ork Boxes ; Dressjng-cases, Reticules 2 Comicr Bags ; i en-knives ip shell, ivory, pearl, &c.; Vases ; Pocket Pisto's in great variety ; Zevolvers; Guns; Whips ; Tortoise-sheil, Braid } Table, Dessert and salt Spoons ; silver-plated Spouns ; sewing Birds. shot Bags and Pouches ; Meerschaum and other Pipes; Plate Looking Glasses ; cloth, hair, tooth aid shaving Brushes ; Engravings ; Fenders : stair Rods ; Tumblers; Wineglasses and other Glassware ii erfumery ; Hair Oil ; paim, honey, sun-flower, ainber, glycerine and other Fancy Soaps ; Toys in endless variety, &c. &e. ie A large assortment of Plated and common Jewellery, we adapted for Country and Retail Dealers. tw Discount to the Trade November 29. Im JAMES McCOMB. Eg EE ee And a great variety of other small and useful articles too nu-/ ani ‘side Combs; Watch Glasses: Nickel, silver Lea,. | Literature. FENN OVER THE RIVER. BY AN UNKNOWN AUTHOR. Over the river they becken to me, | , Loved ones who’ve crossed to the farther side, The gleam of their snowy robes I see, But their voices are lost in the dashing tide. : There's one with rnglets of sunny gold, And eyes the reflection of heaven’s own blue, Ile crossed in the twilight gray and cold, And the pale mist hid him frém mortal view ; We saw not the angels who met him there, ‘The gates of the city we could not see, Over the river, over the river, My brother stands waiting to welcome me. | | Over the river the boatman pale Carried another, the household pet ; Her brown curls waved in the gentle gale, Darling Minnie! I see her yet. She crossed on her bosom her dimpled hands, And fearlessly entered the phantom dark, We felt it glide from the silver sands, And all our sunshine grew strangely dark ; We know she is safe on the further side, Where all the ransomed angels be ; Over the river, the mystic river, My childbood’s idol is waiting for me. For none return from those quiet shores, Who eross with the boatman cold and pale ; We hear the dip of the golden oars, And catch a gleam of the snowy sail; And lo! they have passed from our yearning hearts, They cross the stream and are gone for aye. We may not sunder the vei! apart That hides from our vision the gates of day, We only know that their barks no more May sail with us o’er life’s stormy sea ; Yet somewhere I know on the unseen shore They watch, and beckon, and wait for me. And T sit and think when the sunset’s gold Is flushing river and hill and shore, I shall one day stand by the water cold And list for the sound of the boatman’s oar; I shall watch for a gleam of the flapping sail, [ shall héar the boat as it gains the s rand, T shall pass from sight with the boatman pale To the better shore of the spirit land. I shalt know the loved who have gone, before, And joyfally sweet will the mecting be, When over the river, the peaceful river, The Angel of Death shall carry me. -_—-_—_— 4-3 OS THE KILLING PRINCESS. wee Poland, with the sixteen northern diadems which the industry and enterprise of ber predecessors had collected, in the jewel- chamber of the Winter Palace, her imperial maiesty found chaniver OF tne infer Paiace, her imperial maiesiy found it necessary to inqnire after the revenues of certain domains which had always been considered its appendages. late uncertainties of the Polish throne, they bad been farmed Moreover, Catherine the rest wanted money, end the Prineess Prestovia Nicola rodizoff had offered to purchase a large estate of the crown- lands situated on the Vistula, in order to build there a l-southern residence fer herself and suite in severe winters. ‘uy more than ordinary copfusier, ( 1 ti | ‘The princess was one of the richest subjects in Russia. She owncd forests ia Livonia, fishing-towns on the White | Sea, and mines in Siberia, Her family were among the j oldest of the Russian nobility ; the blood of the ancient czars | lowed in their veins ; and they claimed a lefi-handed descent ‘from Ivan the Terrible. Her excellency was accustomed to boast of these honours, though rather in a private way, for Catherine had too much treuble in getting the throne to tolerate such imperial recollections; so the princess contented i herself with publicly mentioning, when occasion served, that | she was of the real old Muscovite race, unmingled with any | Swedish or German cross, Spiteful people, wlio had net so ;pure astock-to boast—and there were many such in St. | Petersburg—said as much might have been guessed from the | Tartar features of ber excellency, who, notwithstanding, went | further in foreigu fashions, follies, and luxuries than any of ithe court. Her bails, masks, and dinners @ /a Francaise, | rivalled those of the czirina herself. She kept a French williner in constant occupation in her palace, bad three cooks and two hair-dressers duly imported fiom Paris every |year, that period being as long as any of them could be ‘induced to remain in the service of her excellency ; kept a french secretary for conducting her correspondence, and | talked occasionally of the verses she had written in imitation ‘of Rousseau. | Princess Grodizoff was a widow of unknown years—for | hoops, false bair, rouge, and patches rcndered age in those oe a matter rather dificult to make cut—but it was said | } that her name-day had been celebrated before a stone was laid on the banks of the Neva, or a inland peasant perished in its marshes. In short, ter excellency was older than the /modern capital, yet she bade fair to employ the Freneh |milliner and her congeners for many a year to come, and ‘keep a firm ho'd of her broad possessions, _ partly by marriage and purtly by inheritance; the princess | was the heiress of her family, and, as sometimes happens to ‘noble houses, all the rest impoverished their estates, and got ‘into debt through vain eudcavours to cmulate ber splendour. People said she did wonders for them all ; brought out their their estates, to guard against extravagance ; while o:hers sought after the motive for such benefuctions, her highness not being the woman to part with a rouble easily. Ler turp ‘for hard bargain-makipg was universally acknowledged ; even Catherine was well aware of it, for the princess had bought 'erown-lands before ; and the inquiry into the Polish accounts was accordingly instituted. The czarina was too well acquainted with her faithful subjects to intrust that investigation to their hards. Alter ty’s agents at Versuiiles. The powers that preside over the exivencies of princes seemed to have cut out Gaston de - ° ‘ reve . . | Thiepville for his work. The son of a farmer-general, whore good fortune died with Madame de Pompadour, he had an When Catherine LT. had safely deposited the erown of — r ree t Bee ~ , EE ee EDWARD \ HELAN] Chis is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, man speak free.——BURIPIDES. {EDITOR axp PUBLISHER, — ae : sheila tinea ae ome SS eee Vou. VILL. CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1858. No. 24 — —— , a ao : — ee — a : aaten erence na ———$—$$—<—$—$$$$—$ Ss ; CITY TANNERY. The Choapost and most General Assorted ae 6 clear-headed, always alive to his own intcrest steel where his honour was engaged, and as ardent as the best of his countrymen in either love or war. Gaston was not very bri:liant nor very handscme, but determined to be somebody ; and finding himself unable to fulfil that resolution in France, he came to try the orthern market, like other wares that would not sell at home, There was not a town from Berlin to St. Petersburg in which he had not looked out for his fortune in vain; the Russian capital had afforded him nothing but the empty title of attache, which he had ace sumed after waiting three veeks in-the ambassador's anteroom and the hospitality of a poor state-councillor, to whom he had brought letters of introduction from a relative in the embassy at Paris. This councillor was an old man nobly born, but very poor. His family bad lost their fortune in’ building a palace to please Peter the Great, and ornament his new city ; three inundations of the Neva had Succesrively swept the building away ; and at length, when their lands and roubles had beeu thus submerged, the noble proprietors were obliged to take up their residence in the only corner of the palace which the waters had spared, where they lived with great economy, and quite forgotten by court and ezar—timber huts and dirty warehouses multiplying rouud them, as that quarter of the town went out of fashion and grew low. The councillor considered himself the last of his family ; his wife was long dead ; aad he“had but one daughter, Sophia, whose prospects, but true as [us frequently rchearsed by her father, were to sell the old house, with all it contained, pay the expenses of his funeral and retire into the convent of Fasting Sisters, to which the ladies of her house had a hereditary right of admission, The family were distantly related to the Princess Grogigof: but her good graces had been Jost by the councillor thirty years before at a game of cards, and in consequence, Sophia and her father were left to their own resources. The old man bad a winter asthina, and was scldom in good-Lumour. The house was poor and cold; they had no servant but a mujik who was never sober when he could get anything to drink But the councillor welecmed the stranger to his stove and table as heartily as if both had been be:ter furnished ; and the stranger was glad to stay—first, because he could net find more comfortable quarters ; and, secondly, because Sophia, one of the prettiest and best girls in St. Petersburg kept that remnant of a palace habitable by her presence, doing not only all the household work, but all the good- humour and cheerfulness for the whole es'ublishment, Gaston had often wished to be rich; but he did go still more fervently after his admission to the state councillor’s home. Sophia hud no fortune; her education had been so neglected, that she eculd speak nothing bet Russ, and she never Wore patches. But she put .bis laced waistcoat in repair, when he could not bay another, to appear at the embas<v * altace antlet eek : | cuibas-y 5 always smiled when he came in; and he thought a f' is ‘nuri.drace wri heanama liow Eri. AM Ree t.j4 | -4~$ loohchaes Soe hens el te COOP gy Hae CCCs Rees TM woklig for psace anu employment all the way from France, He ops vie: now It Vecuine tremendous; he laid siege arts -ourticrs, and the hands of i ue . sat earts of ourticrs, an ie auUs of valets, though his munitions for the latter kind ef worfare we ing extr ie Jatter Xind of warfare were growing extremely slender, In the; jear, and Catherine fixed upon and superintended by so many hands, that the accounts were | quietly through her Polish accounts, and make a t lof the same. jtrusted so far without a cheek; her espe! who had been deputed to manage These had come | | ‘daughters, found places for their sons, and kept them all on | and { urtune Farely favours the importuuate, Through some uf these chauuels, however, his name came to the imperial him as the wan she wauted to go @ ruc report According to northern custom, he was not hiajesty’s private i ; the business, assigned him a humble dependent of his own, named Michel Clea if, by way of clerk and assistant. Clozoff had been a merchant in his day, and supplied the court with furs; bat his trade went out of fashion after the i’'rench architect heated the Uermitage, and nothing thicker | than taffeta was allowed to be worn; sv Clozoff cave up fur- j selling, and, with his five sons, hung about the oftskirts of \the palace, living by small quiet jobs, and especially at the jservice of the private secretary, from whom they got more promises than pay. Lf the ex-merchant had been placed as aspy in that low dingy cffice behind the admiralty, where the two worked night and duy at the Polish account-hooks— for the ezarina was in haste—he had nothing to report, but that Gaston spared neither pen nor calculation to make out the subtractions from her majesty’s new revenues, which at length were found so considerable, that it was expected there would be two or three villages in Siberia peopled by the delinquents. The estate on the Vistula was, however, most clear of such encumbrances, the discovery of which fact brought the private secretary to assure Gaston of her ma- jesty’s satisfaction, to pay him five hundred roubles for his work, and to receive filty back as his own pei quisite for allowing him to be employed. Perliaps it was the probabil. ity of tmperial favour shining on the stranger, that induced his excellency to become condescending and chatty ; discuss the opera, which had just been opened ; and tell the news of the day ; ‘hat the Princess Grod.zoff iatended to purchase the Polish estate without delay, and had signified her intention of taking a poor relative whom nobody knew, named Sophia | Petrova, ynder her protection, Iu pureuing patronage Gaston had acquired considerable command of countenance, and the secretary’s news made it all requisite. The pocr relation whom nebody knew was the very girl who had repaired his lace waistcoat, and smiled wh n he came; and a vision rose before his fancy, of 5 pia deciared heiress of all the princess’s possessions, ad himself‘ invested with the most noble order of St. Nicolas. Lt was suddenly cat short by an exclamation frou Cicz ff, who had been industrioasly Writs iug in the further coruer of the office, as became an assisiant clerk, and was expected neither to talk nor hear; but he groaned out * Pour Svuphia !"’ so vudibly, that Geston started, and the secretary looked round. The cbservaiion must have escaped the bonest Russian unawares ; be cowered under the = ’ lle . , . i : .<@ 5 f |secretarys cyc ike w uian deteeted ia the act of a fla ‘rant / ° cS | crime. | | jwith me, behind St. Olga’s Cheren, your excelicney, * Do you know the girl?’ inquired his excelleney with evident curiosity. te , on > | . . j vo a lo : =f ’ si } Yes, my ord; her father isa sta e-counciiior; but very poor. They live in the Moscow quarter, in the same street Sue was the ouly person that would enter our Louse when we bad . . | . : . -- ° . . the fashion of czara past and future, she looked out for a/the fever, of which my poor wile died three wivters ago.” foreigner worthy of such confidential employment, and found | one in the person of Count Thienville, a young et/ache of |ameans to reward her by the princess’s kiudness, the French embassy, and strongly recourmended by her majes- | prospect for ber. « A good girl,” said the secretary. “ No doubt Providence li isa noble | You know the princess bas provided for | wost of her fetale relatives; in fact, [ believe Souhia Petrova lis the last of them; coutle-s she will be provided lor also. * * No doubt, your cxeeliency,” said Clozoff, but the looks of both speakeis somehow reversed their words. With the early acquaintance with what might be called the More secretary, it Was cold-blocded sarcasia; with Cloz ff, it wag ‘delicate deiaiis of business. Fortune had given him no a Raussiao’s resignation to the powers that be; an C5 d after 2 ‘estate but his wits. Nature bad made bim cool, keen, and few more obseryatious on the brilliant prospects of the sates £ Pat. RO Rs + me OE OT ERs: See TENN He Ty, ah memes ea eee J ill an pitincnits tie tian at Pain me ery . ene geste senate a oars ee ee Ui iy Ul ra Ui .