OH VLAN. ‘© possession of information which reude 7 ? Ae a . 3 i - . " f koe [oe Th ~ ' t “19° . . * r if 1 31 calles Chey reeoutmend shall remainy Cotton} CONDITION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS. The New York Mord says :—* In commenting and live stock —fifteep to twenty per cent on fst, | THE RAWLWAY QUESTION. | building railways, or else lie under the reproach prudence or foresivht, has befallen the “ Li. t shoukl be taxed Se. per pound after daly next, Gano I1.tgJan. 30.—New Opbeans papers of upon railroad accidents, We are apt to forget and oply tive comparatively unimportant articles | . —— lof. being behind the age. A little island in the | berats,”’ than the whole fault is attributed to “ i Riviig oH A erep of Loree million bales a wevetiue | the Bath say the interior of Mexiean papers ttre Hit righ@uere inthe ety of New. Yurkpedestri- Hee p hehe fice quired fred uavigation and Cane | Me. Borror: middie of the Pacific—it it contains the magieal | “ Tery fiction” or “clique” in Charlottetown ‘ of sixty-six million dollars, and ona erop Of fodr entirely filled with Beoounts of the movements of AU Is quileas perilous as railroad riding tthe in Colonial waters.’ —Under these citeumstances, I find that my letter to you has partially ie : “ , : ; wmittion bale® Oighty-cight maltion dollars. As the troops in pursurt of the, guerillas from the sea. Country. Hurtig the past year one hundred and while we are exceedingly glad that every efiert} aa © ern jnumber-of human beings to the square wile—|For my own part, I must ouly state, that T ; crop of thé “preseat year will vet- probably | eoast te the mountains, and al¥e report the con- |“ veut - ve eee 7. were oe by oe = has zm poate by _ Government of oe =. | roused the dreaimer of the Herald. He is cer | onght, in the opinion of these gentlemen, have} was not in Georgeiown at the nomination. J : be fees than two willitin” bales, they -e*/ginuance of the summary exeeution of gdetilas | OveT Ot course The number Injured must de | vinces te continue the trade gations wh jeg | teinly Ret so petulant as his fellow-dreamer of] i. jine or lines of failway. Oue condition of|have never heard of ansthing having } ; timate the retetite for the fiscalyear ending | jp, accordance with the Emperur’s decree, ‘The | Y€°Y much larger. We do not kuow but what, proved so materiully benetigial to both countries, | : ‘ : : its line or lines ¢ ay. » condition 0 @ nev 1ear thing having heen Jane 30, 1807, at forty tniftiongdéllats, and Moe] country is moteuheettiod thaw at anydines since | #er all, the city railroads are ohees oN i, Nea a assured that no aman in the ts he the Islander is, but he is not one whit more suecess, even though that condition be the most | conceeted in Charlottetown concerning this thefattre an average revente Bat least ONY) the organization o€ the Imperial Government. Ue te human lite as a ee i ee ee <liteues _— w peopatiot reasonable, His whole article wonderfully re-| important, js not all the conditions; let other} election, — the letters were handed me by a : miter : , plot to overthrow the Goverument in the State only difference is, that an accident Whery a dozen | as the above. M © may bows livde embarrass: | semble third rate Debating Clab speeec! a 7 , 4 a Regariihy tobacco, th¢y are tinanimons that) of Michoacan has been discovered, are killed ere Ser es —_ eee, ~ first "% the change, but we = tlaigd iat by — ps = : oT = i pete ae sie conditions be absent, and your experiment will countryman while addressing the meeting, or = thestes should pot be un the feaf With some The, Likery) Mexican pager, published . in bast ser, aoe ont hundred aug sixty cin will bring cur kpeneivents dv.eus for | eee ee gen eene ee inevitably prove a failure. I once read some-| immediately before it, and I have not heard up . ahiade Rd, ~ . a feat the prisovera G@ken fr © past year, alse, one hun a xty- | will Oring me neig t ltone dacksh/ Whe whoidef the albela 6 om j r , ; 7 amendment ef the present jaw and exhaustion of : . ney i eee preeet ag > tae “persons were deowned inithis eity, and sixty-two | Reciporcity an fair teems, belore threé scars have long enouzh, The wholq of the lots d ten where of alittle boy who thought that if he | to this of any person who bad signed Mr. B.'s = Te — be <r of eighteen mil, pte or — a scene an eked — Killdd, the wost otfwhigh fast cases Were umrders ‘paar away,” minutes must be occupied. To be toreed toa could manage to put on his father’s boots, he requisition having voted again 6 hie ious from mlactrired tobacco. | y ‘ ag i ’ ” es ‘ ‘ , i eer ‘ia ee ~ «ty 7 ae " r ’ iD - . With, respeet,te.inco they recommend the been liberated. Additional forced loans had been outright. pana he second Letter on the Railway question | sit down within five seeonds of the expiration of could walk as fast as his father. The young I am, dear Sir, vours truly, aa reb.to. . ——- Ting ag? wi ie Keeked | imposed by the authorities at Matamoras, and all | A LirrLe roo Fast. — The following para-|is sprizhtly and areumentive, and deserves a} that time would, in his estimation, forever blast 2 oar ere - ee = 7 ee ne wee eee Fate levied | coanatinication with Brownsville interdieted.- In | A L oo aster ane thhat per i Be x. a at ifn ae “ae 3 ad philosopher tried the experiment, and soon M. McWADE, , CORDES - ' 8, >, . i - r ; 7 y . se a ? ore lit y ee “le é { f ‘ P S$ character as 3 ator, , ave > acir : F : . . T : . a - ta cpavantactrenmette 91,000 Ve cxrmpted from tax. | CoMsequence of the death of King Leopold, the | graph is going ” roun : ri if a —. we happy nom de plum than thas W - i ~ us character as an orator € ca thé Ac | found himself floundering in the ditch. Those Souris, Feb’y. 15th, 1866. ‘ ation? withwutjallow ance fur house. rent, or at) een had returned to their pal- ite it i a iy of the New Lork |correspondent has chosen, _ The project of| customed s at a “harangue™ of the last | who would put little Prince Edward's feet into <9 0 <p-~0 o- = vast, thatthe ame for } * rent shall t; #ee 4 ‘ e , vrata correspondent t— huildine 2ailwar i j ‘ seems ¢} shéeaker, “he ‘ol : > usur i lek o- . r . . ” he adiiitall in aii ce feast, thatthe au aia -yerena seeememneman ne tiie bad issied a decree granting te | een setae Shiite British Provincey.ofPhe uilding aR sitway this Ist und seewns tons|speaker, Then fo ows the a il mt wt his} yi. big sister’s (Nova Scotia or New Brunswick) PHE RECIPROCITY TREATY. soyree vf fitty ‘tuillions | Lamon Zangrogue the exclusive privilege, for 75 M vt ici a Trad c a: nai: Gai tae extremely shadowy in the present Tistless State Supposed character—his habits or his personal shoes, are alannah an cana ae tas athe nial . ‘ ore, | canes ee . and ious railroad | Montreal Board of de have resolve Mh wie ebaol seeik be " a a ee ee ' ; os we acl ? ae ae fa . Wien a . c " . . They recommend a repeal of the tas ov erude | Sorieden’ Vive! Gras ont Puebla, ib Jaleps ton | adequate means exist of enabling Canada te com- | Of o&r politic al affairs, and with the abontivable | peculiavities;—next eomes a long disquisition, | g.JJow was. _ 7 ot of eee ye oe Polroleum, abd that the-rates ow refined coal oil.) perote, | pete with me kivie Cont Set ot the eee Land Question as much unsettled as ever.) the drift of whichis to prove that the speaker Tho Biovail adestis that, Pcinae tlewond. Ie Reciprocity Treaty, or rather the negotiations vaptha, beuzine, &c., be fetained as at present. | . hast { in Tuseany witl leanal must be enlarged, the St. Lawrenée locks o re del eer ‘olf iypatel litt eer. te : oe von oe oa : : ’ , " that vexed question, we elip from the Iste 4 ino revenue ftnm this sotroe is estimated at a ceptors eA way oir the permed et Ljengtheved and deepened, and a new canal built However, ng harm can arise from viewing ail is & wiser, a bn At and amore fa:-sceing MAN | land has prospered of late years even without |°"" A, . 1 : nf three willieds. Tho commissioners oppose the, conding [ralian emigrante te the Empire, and a | between Champlain aod St. Lawrence. Vetitions | the pros and cons of the Railway project; and} than any of his opponents; aud last of all, a railroad. He gives the Rip Van Winkles of telegrams. Wee o uae qtme any importance tuial remission of toX on turpentine and roam, | portion of the money has already arrived and to the home government, lookiug to a peaceful | Proser’? js quite a match for all comers we | after more than half the allotted time is expir- P $B. Lilaied tia credit foc ke.’ He aitzibaies cnr *° the statements it contains. Indeed, there oud {aver the allowance ot no drawback on their caine por Bawe of tad wade seression from England, and annexation to the | d ‘ *, 3 3 ny ° r* r ~ms to be nothing certain respecting the a ; i , | P : _ a a ro : ’ aie , . have yet seen against the side he has taken. ed, he addresses himself to the subject under | 5) ope ial seteneeiin ~mtarnrins cies Cte ae cat © J © ez- export, ‘Tae revenue trom this source is esti- | Monterey is garrisoned by traitors. Matamuras | United States, ot the formation of a separate go- ’ eS a : : ; increased prosperity to the enterprising spirit) |. T . farther thin that tf eit tated at two millions. | boing considered in danger, a French aav-of-war | Yerument, are also said to be in cireulation among The third Letter, from Mr. Michael Me-| diseussion, and, in a loose, rambling, and very | o¢ oyy go-ahead neighbours of the neighbour- PAPRS ATOM > Ree ee Te ee be ‘Prom watches they estimate a revenne of th-ee | has been ordered there, | Senexatsousts te ee districts of the mart | Wade of Souris, throws a little, but not much, | feeble manner, argues in favor o! the eause he ing Provinces. He is not at all conplimentary renewed by the Americans on terms such as wh a half willens; (rom stamps, tweaty williogs:! Ad earthquake was fe't throughont Mexico on | Uwe provinces and Canada, : 142 ee ~ otal a th a 4 2 Sarees : ’ lthe Provinces ean accept :— frou legacy duties, three milltons ; fron express | the 13th ult., and was severely felt on the South bevveseementet a light on the late East Point Election. Tt con-| has espoused. to the denizens of this little Sleepy Hollow of - Youx, Feb. 5th \ Washinet , Ons 5 J " was 5 s a aaa siemens mite ae . ; sot Sg YU GY Sallie a . New York, Feb. 5th. — / shineton deg. aud telegraph companies, at o per cent. on the | Awerican coast. The destruction at the city of a eos a ‘ofa er ye eens, — | firms the opinion we formed that the question) It is certainly very pleasant for visionaries) girs. We are a lazy, stupid set, who won't nie ‘ays the Ways and Means Committee en the t . hich t y nie war ya 7 eal oe weap ose arpa diony cae cade teeshenoeniehenai Maen jof non-residence was the main cause of: Mr. |and fanatics to eonsule themselves. with the even take the trouble to close our jaws upon | will hold a special meeting this afternoon ty he tak off Wale ev recommend to be reduced Tha EF . P Afi aan a ut BECESS Ly ; ee Shia ee ? ; 3 ‘ ” ” , : , j ; ar 4 ti one hundredth of one per cent. at —. ela ne manent oan - Pr crnenta omnes | ag the cities having rer tity thousand ihabi- [Davies's defeat. “That there was shameful |reflection that every good cause and every | the plums and goodies that our generous neigh- coanenn Torte Oe oe ae There liows ; on banks, fifteen millions; ou heenses, fil). waonificent rece fr ype at | tuts (as shower by data collected at the Depart | hlundering on the part. of ‘those who got up| useful project has been “spoken against.” Ss malate samen an sane ,, |38 no prospect that the Committee teen millloos; on salaries, two paiiene: from | et te ra tin 6d nc om, Ont iment of the Interior), in the order in which they | } : =, ” "7 f i " Ope i b! p E.auall J 4 forti ee | Hy P: PoND ft bours are continually dropping PAP POR mouths. in favor of a new Treaty or of ext the Wilktellaneons sources, twenty-one milbons, &c. | ing ores Te saupin- aeuptiteted ‘seciicines j stand, together with the percentage of foreign na- |the requisition to him, is unquestionable. | b juaily comforting is a knowled se of the fact) Some people are foolish enough to attribute | 4)9 one. But it is not tnlikely that it - » _ ‘ : . | , . “3 : a ft . ere , a 4 ate iper . . » és o.° ° ° - ° Phe fotal Teventie is estimated at four hundred | jer bod . re taken | U¥ilies in each >— The reyuisition “once signed, some of the | that nearly every benefactor of our race, and | our present flourishing condition to the work-| port in favor of Reciprocal Legislation. The " : § y guard of honour, the horses were taken ; , ; # t , : prese x 1 . = s eet aren After ee all the ex-| from the carriage, which were drawn by men| ena signers seemed to think ‘their work was done. | evéry man whose ideas were in advance of the | jng of the Reciprocity Treaty, and to imagine Canadians are willing to enlarge the Locks 6f ei “ e fise ear, tuchudy tere : i : . relgu . . és : : . A ¢ c _ WV “ang oT] Se ‘the public debt on ontian bade fitly auillivee | oe me pie Ne = —. a | Population Nativities We never thought that the College question, | age in which he lived, was persecuted and re-| that the potato rot had something to do with oe ey vor aaa “al oe Gomes 5 , ® ow ae , = * wor { f ogs, ches, “ries. p ee : ye i" ny ss ‘ . . “ p 1 ; Tir bis principal, @ surplus of eighty-five millions | Pyopress stayed in Vera Craz a week, during New York, 805,650 4TH or religion in any shape, entered into the eon-| viled by his benighted contemporaries. But, | the introduction of an improved system of agri- pst edie! thie on distilled liquors, Whiél: ae remain applicable for the reduction of tax-| which time she was the guest of the mnnicipalty, Poiladelphin, oe Po : test. The result shows that there is imménse | if the editor of the Herald will take the trouble | culture among our farmers: but they are not shall Tastee all temptations rm ain ing, and - nee and was feted day and night. Mexico neyer be- Brooklyu, 205,06 te rege: ; 7 : tk iv % ; 7 ; : . : QI : udiiference on the part of yery many of the | to examine the following syllogisms, he will find | jen in advance of the age, as the edi f the |t0 abolish free ports; and they will consent » The makes the following recommenda: | tore witnessed such aa outburst of popular en- Baltimore, 212,418 2474 me s i 3 3 . men in advance of the age, as the editor of the that'w hue ae ue Coe : 7 ar , si ot ' . ; nat we (Americans) shall tax goods and jlonei--That'a tax uf five conte per pound thusiasin. Boston, 1i7,ol2 30,58 eleetors to political principles inthe abstract. | that a fallacy must lurk somewhere in his train rll i ° . , . C levied on all cotten raised in the *wited ae e- “et ae . New Orleans, 168,075 38.31 Rut we eile this i aeaaae wilt Qthisnie uf veaiodine Herald is, : ti duce imported from Canada, 80 as to gwe © m trom and after July J, 1866; that the tax on| Tanires: A Bacrisu Oriwton,—The followin: Cineinnati, 161,044 45.71 ' I 5 Vane Pe ™ s° He reproaches us with not avail!ns ourselves | no advantage over our own... . .Gold 1393. entton consumed in the United States be levied | father significance rewarks are made hy the Pali St. Louis, 169,753 5.70 before the next Session be brought to a close;| The professors of the true religion have been | of what he eloquently called the “generous enter- $a —__—_ i > a ait ” engage ate cam? Phy ? Sapo 5 ee 4) 4 . > . cam 7 5 _ ’ ~ “\ PA , on manufactures, sed upon that exported uyon | — os ~ ‘t seodie pees yee lia | 7 a farts asi and that the old tively, healthy tone of political | persecuted and reviled. The Mormons have prise” of our neighbors. I was under the impres- CATHOLIC YOUNG MEN'S LITERARY . ete ut the port of export, no veesel to be ret beer Dares F , ‘ suflale oH, IS ».4 se 4 ss ape a ‘ ; : ; el : ; 5 ” Bh. ‘ pcan om iaantee adibasiia eoqpidiente thet the | Commission te perturin a task vot often left to a Newark, 71914 37.02 feeling will be manifest in the East Point Dis-| been perseeuted and reviled, Therefore, the | gion that Captain Evans liberally ferried across INSTITUTE. ws : id; alew, that a drawback on cot-| *berdinate authority. This te to visit the West Louisville, 68,333 33.75 trict before the uext + «éneral election shall| religion of the Mormons is the true religion. ape tS eae ae oil . . ot all touat tien aan we the full ounet of the eusten be | Indies, Mexico, Brazil, and the otber South Ame | Albany 62,367 34.06 t b ] ' \ * Tl 1 i le i i the straits sundry sacks of grain, barrels ofeges| Tye Session for 1866 of the above Tnstitution, ~ y . . . ° — aie 7 ee) 6. > ake place, AUIS 10se WhO Oppose new auc splendit 1 oysters d other articles a . . allowed; that all cottea be exempt; that ail) can States, and arrange treaties of commerce Washington, Gz,122 Wl 9° , and oysters, and other articles too numerous to} was opened on Wednesday evening last, when eutted geods exported to be exewpt from other} between them and Canada We presume the San Franeweo, 56,502 5u09 <p ~ schemes are sleepy idlers, ‘moping owls,’’| mention; and the owners f these all availed mee Donald a c St Bibi excite taxes; that «o long as there shall be a tax | treaties will really be with the British Govern- Provinee, DU, 666 24.00 THLE TION. MR.COLES ON THE AMERICAN | “very dolis.” The editor of the Heralid ob as ' j ee ners of these all availed /the Rey. A. McDonald, Rector of St. r : t, which otherwise will lose the coutrol of the aiibeacnete i A ee 4B U2 oh iunarerena tea ’ ee “j}themselves of the generous enterprise of our | tajn’s College, delivered an admirable Lecture upon American raw cotton, there shall be a spe- | Men". a : ; ree 3 ‘OROSILE F ROTp awry oS tl Doge Ses Ss Eee 5 p tam 5 College, ivere erat duty on all imported fabries of as many cents | foreign policy of ite great colonies, achange quile| "Pye extent of the Califoruia wine interest is PROROSALS FOR RECIPROCITY. poses a new and splendid scheme, namely, neighbors, who, for a trifling consideration nor| oy “Jreland and the Fenians.”’ In. the first per pound as are kevied upon raw rotten. The | nceusistent — a continued dependence. | ea paratively little known in the Atlantic States. — the Confederation of the British North Ameri-| » tl sitesi trans a od the hith : ventle commission also recommend a duty upon mixed | Even in allowing Canada to regulate details, the | Pyery year inereases the product immensely. Toi red Becven é0.sue:(Ruannien soi Midieaiiiinn (ianiainn poling worth mentioning, trausported them whithet} part of his Lecture the Reverend Gestleman tubries imported of one bait the tax upen raw lenpesiel Mersneivent xives up much aud yet us The estimate for the present year ix 350,000 gul- OXAMINER, ms “ a wrefore, the editor of the | they were consigned. By the Herald's own} clearly pointed out the oppressions imder evtton, where the fabric ia one-half cotton or less, | C804 egisiates ter her owu tarifl, how avoid | joys’ in Los Angelos county, 350,000 gallong in| Sin :— erald is a sleepy idier—a moping owl and a face? yy - ‘ me j ° ; ; ; . ies , A * Pre re ened, - 3 aad 4) confession our Rip Van Winkles have been wide | which Tre : red : . t thoes more than balf cotton to pay full daty. A} the probable complications! We trust that none | Sonoma county, and 300,000 in the remainder ot It now.annesut: that the beesdae Delecation|.very dolt. , Horrible fallecy that, isn’t it, Mr covtsdsion ous Hip Ven Winkies bare rnrar, oe hich Ireland has laboured ; but, he contended, bill erbodying the above recommendations is ap- S ore ewe or perenne ne wpe the State, or 1,000,000 gallons in all—more than : vt mS EOS es , Il " ld?! ee ee eee y MT i, MU! awake enouzh to set two steamers running be-| that those oppressions would be only aggra- ‘ » nh “ treaty ws absurd—w . “hs sie * J at’ . r ‘ +, ia . parade shah Pi Bi Sin . . oy" 9! " " 28 i ace i a . ; ‘ peuded te the report. binding the Canadians te eee ee ne tour times the eutire product of the United States from the | woven s to i ashineton for a re “0 ae 7" if your on is sound, it is | tween this Island and two neighbouring provin-} yated and not removed by such an organiza- FRARPUL SCENE* IN A GERM AN VILLAGE, | Wonist tariffs, now immensely high, and shortly, we esiitcaeemiiiibiiect vere newal of the Reciprocity Treaty, has, so far, rot “ jast are indeed an inevitable eonclusion. ces, and it is the opinion of a great many that) tion as that of the Fenian Brotherhood. He i : ' it is ooo te be raised under au agreewent with} When Miss Burdett Coutts became the heiress | Mr. Secretary MeCulloch to allow one of his | The meve circumstance of many useful schemes they are quite as effectual means—secing that} denounced, in indignant and eloquent terms, : 3 the Uuited States.” f Mra. Coutts, who had been Miss Mellon, the Sse ..£ . : roti a ls tas ” ' 5 ’ 3 BENPRADS OF PEOPLE EATEN UP ALIVE BY Worms o 8 , be * s ’ Deputies to submit, for the consideration of | meetinys with a strenuous Opposition, does not lien arc have::tho -Jelandcr’ fithi : os . — SE ee actress, her fertune was computed al thirteen . ‘ 5 oh : i we are not to have the Islander's tunnel—of| this gross imposture, whose sole object 18 to . : . ’ Tress > to 2 r. > © > . o av > particnls t eye ° ° " : f- A fearful account of the new plague which is} A New ANGLo American Daxk.—The Eng-| tons of gold. It has been growing ever since, Congress, a report and Bill, extending the | prove anything in favour of any particular pro availing ourselves of the wenerous enterprise of | cheat eredulous Irish people out of their hard A ia) hs aeess ees lish and American Bavk, with a eapital of £1,-| and the unfortunate lady is so rich that she ean- | Treaty for one year from the 17th Mareh nest, | jected enterprise. Let the Jerald, in his next, BS ieee te Cire Me a aia . . s : ; > srs ae RT tie eee eres Oe 500,000 ft hull te be first subscribed), in ahares ef | Het spend her itieame or eved give it xway, ‘al- land on such terms as, it appears, Messrs. Galt, | give us a few instances of splendid schemes aes smanveres . ” enree F a an i se ge a myer: a : Paris journal, as fellows : £390, has the concurrence of two of the most | though several active secretaries are kept busy | Py ih SPR RAEE, |PORETS, 7] 9 cae ae 7 ' 5} would be. “ What I want is facts. about New York. The Hall was densely Hider leben is a small town in the envirene of| prosperous of our banks—the Union of London in reading and answering tre cbegging letters ad- | Henry & Co. have approved of. Now, Sir, it | thatended in the ruin of their projectors and Yours, crowded, and the Lecture was frequently ap- 9 Magdeburg—ene of these little German towns | and the Oriental Bank Corporation, and that the | dressed to her. was my opinion that the Canadian Government supporters. He will then see that every new 1 PROSER ; o . Pand was in ai- { that seem the abode of peace and rustie felicity Board ef six directors will comprise” four mem- areata —- ee “ ine sh anwiste al 1 snterprise must stand or fall ai: ae qk i rt plauded. The ¢ ity Amateur Band wa : : where no nae is beard aave the merry clink ot | bers of the dircetors ef those establishments. In) The vaults of the Bank of Pranee, which con- Ly © & MO MING, 00 much anxiety about. the} en r ory . wai er YS ait on its own intrinsic + ncepiennenieanneiililittiaiasiadilidaaantenaian tendance, and played several of their favorite the glasses at the bier brauerei, and the jolly | fet, the new bank is intended, it may be aseumed, | tain more treasure than any other single spot on Treaty, afterthe Detroit Convention, by send-| merits. The fact of its being opposed tells T : Eptron or tae Exawixer airs.—The Very Rev. James McDonald, (of tones of the drinkers calling for another glasa ali| to transaet all their large American business, | the face of the globe, are accessible through an ing members of their Government to Washing-| neither for or azaiust its practicability or jts ee a ee "or 7 ~ : . r around, Well, thia littl town, so smiling and} which has hitherte been conducted through various | on door, which has three keys, and these keys are ° a . ‘ 5 . ae ; P : : ’ "| Dean Sin -— indian River,) will lecture on W ednesday even- happy, is now filled with mourning and desola-| mercantile firms at New York and New Orleans. kept by three leading officers, “The iron stair- | ton and inviting Delezates from the Lower] usefulness. The modesty with which our editor Rin a f ®thins | .}ing next—Subject: “A Tour in Europe.” View. - ey a a month past death has reigned noo wee yp shares, — or ~" already on. . “Fs eae the arg may a Tae | Provinces to meet at Quebec, to consider the | insinuates that the editors of the Islander, the f . se Pra me on ~~ wane ead e =< there. <A fearful death after unexam suffer-| taken, and only 5,000 are offered tor subseription. | aud, by a chemical apparatus, a supply of deadly , . - . . |from Benjamin Davies, Esquire, treating of . . ni ings, and these that are aequainted wih the oo —Examiner, Dee. 16. re ee hes We waite te ponetiall every Dart dasteon- terms the Colonies would agree to for a re-| Weekly and the Herald form the vanguard in 7 +H 4) Py ze Dis Baty as le Biackwoon's Macazixe, for January, bas ¢ure of their disease, know that they are being | “ pigrelpretes i ‘ing human life ina few seconde, while the whole | newal of the Treaty, before the American Go- the march of civilization on the Island, is ex- ane - ss mere mm tive natniet, in ween wy been reecived from the American Publishers, caleo up alive by # legion of worme hardly we Sir John Gray, recently elected to Parliament | vault ean be subwerged in ten winutes. lyernment had expressed any opinion of the tremely rich. The candid opinion. of “A name is pretty Ereely used, and a more pre lL. Senst & Co. . The. contents aee-tie meat thick as a human lair, that have worked their) for Kilkenny, Ireland, although a Protestant, ix) rT pee SS CA a > s SPL aE aare tt : oat minent part assigned me than I have any claim | ,, : apes bof ime the way iato the tissue of their flesh, their museles| editor of the Freeman's Journal, a leading Catho-| The commander of a Freneh man-of war has | Detroit Resolutions, partienlarly that one which | Proser’” is, that these gentlemen must vindieaie I havi : ; Fossbrooke; J.S. Mill on our Belief im the 7 aa re : . _ , i . . : o. t represented as haying re y pis . ' and their nerees, , lie paper in Dabtin. laa recent speech Sir John | meer ere ” oem nee s of a| declared a renewai of the Treaty desirah!e ; | their claim to this honoroble position by some i ae 1% Me 7 par Pr ve External World; Switzerland in Summer and [3 not such a fate horrible to dwell upon? On| told tis constituents that be should do bis best to | village in the island ef New Caledowia, in the |. ; eek up tas lane ye .., . | questions to Mr. D., whereas I only put one o " . ‘ 7 : | : " age ' : hha ifor, in my opinion, it was not the business of | thing better than by writing bad editorials { ? ’ Autumn; Cornelius O'Dowd upon Men and wy , ' 2 ne ‘ | Pac * ’ g , ag* ' , to ¢ , 3 ; | 7 ie i tormis mi é the Ith of last mouth Dr. Karl stein, of Frauk-| wnite the liberal Erish and English votes in Par-| Pacific, ne pasing bere guilty gf killing and) rae 3.3 ; $i; ClNeh 4 bean 1: aor ay 3 ; them; the other two were asked by persons at| ), : hei 2 ice ll . Aiddend fort, wrote to one of our friends that upwards of | liament for the removal of that central root of | cating the captain and four men of a Freneh ves- | the | olonists to go abegzing — they did not) fayour of this new Glenmutchkin Railway 4 . ~ | Women and other Things in General ; Memoirs one hundred children—for they appear to enjoy | bitterness, the Lrish Protestant Chureh establish | 8e!, whe fell inte their hands. A French garrison | 7.) an abrovation of the old Treaty, although | Scheme. "| the mecting. On the whole, T must compli- of the Confederate War for Independenee ; tn IMmantty-—had been deprived of their parents. | ment, the church of only EE per cent. of the popu-| bas new been placed on the island. ig , re ms re ment Mr. Davies for the truthful statement he : : % a ; >» Americans ie 95 lai su ear onts whie edt : OT tein , “— ife tters Mvederick W. Robertson Phere was hardly « house im the village thai did | tation, whieh tor three centuries bad been saddied en Be the Americans got the best of the bargain, But if the arguments which the editor of the lable we SS .. | Life and Letters of Frederick W. ’ het nmuber a victim. At that date upwards of | spon the great majority of the people as a badge} Tt is said that the late Eaglish Chief Baren edie as no reciprocal advantage was ob-} [Jeralil-uses to show that his cause is a good has aimed at tie of this trival sh yet M. A,; the Parliament of Salisbury Plain ; teree bundred patients were awaiting death. of servitude. | Thompson was a very facetious companion over |,.- . idle * 4 oa ie ’ . | there are two or three omissions, and an infer- ° , od . : i | , . ) . , ‘tained in the fisheries; and the richt to which, | one, are bad, those the > use . : ’ . , » of the Belgians. The continued which they huew 10 be inevituble—w prey to fear. | nineteen [the bottle, whieh he much enjoyed. At one ot | mt 2 ae = nie ban Ny 2 bor : einer * . ne see gs aoe a ence sought to be deduced from the meeting at wap — he . ; tubsaferiogs... Prosir seventy to cighty of the in-| How roeur® Caxcen.—Not long since an| the judges’ dinners during the assizes there was | &5.lar as this Island was. eoncerned, was sur-| line project to be practicable, are, if possible,| hi bt te es articles, which are the only ones we have so <del balan tne tana a sp cael one speceree = _— eee Free Democrat, | ae certain arr of the Charch. yee rendered with the view of having eqnal privi- } ten times worse. The very important question } aia Wie must beg a place im your paper far read, EY Tye eae piquaney of . a . ’ rape while ¢ Providence Post thinks of rt y- the cloth was removed, the very reverend gues a ‘ ry : le able ff ‘ 5 to n “2, i. Sbey comidered to be the cholera; but they cael eauees ty receive gquveal a pe a said, “Lb always think, my om that = errtain tess in the revistration of shipping aud the | as to where the funds needed to construct the , co Gretel Mr. D. spoke at consider previous Nos, falter down on the roads, and died without relict: ment ot the Democrat iethat some eight inonts age quantity of wine does a man no harm alter a good | coasting trade, railway are to come from, he answers in the a ee ee rs eons — F i saat ’ “Tue Last or tue Liye.’ —This is the title Alicic rorpees alone were picked up. ale length of the nature and operation of the Mr. Pb. Masn, who keeps a store om Wisconsin | dinner.” “Ob ne, by ne means,” replied the | Now, what havé Messrs. Galt, Henry & Co. | }a@nguaze of an evidently very shallow-brained | Pi Phe epitome wos canted by the ravages ofthe | street, ascertained that be had a cancer on his | Chief Baron, “it's the uncertain quantity that) — ree : | -Piovtiactal , in Education Act, and the benefits it had con-/ ofa very interesting story which we have eom- ] seormcailed trichine, whenes the epidemic has | face the size of a pea Ht was cut out by Dr. | does all the mischief! yielded in this new proposal? , Why not ouly| * foviucia’ contemporary: “That any Country |. a 0 she Joland, and Prince of Wales Col-| 1 first page, from the works of perenne @ teen. Neeeisicbites is} Walekt) nad the ape partially healed. Subse-| eon ithe admission of nearly every article of Ameri- | which can afford to spend twelve or fourteen ee et ee eee ee ee a ae ee vane vi the extecoa of the pig, andis capable of quently it grew again, and while he was in Cinein-| Out in Peori, Hlinois, a neted whiskey mazu-| : ne : being transplanted inte and thriving w the human j uatiou business, it attained the size ot a” nckory | facturing region, they test the quality of the |ean manufacture duty free into. the Colonies, body. do Germavy perk flesh imperfeetiy eared) nut. He has remaiued there sinee Christmas up- | liquer by the distance a man can walk after | Yonat to raise the duties on all articles we aud emoked indice shape of ham and sausage, os! der the treatment, and is now perteetly cured, | tasting it. The liquor called “ tangle-legs” is | Xs Gr Dritai : * 08 ly afford to construct a railwat forty mi! @ steple article of lowed, gad from the buman sto-| Phe process is this:—A piece of sticking plaster said to be made of diluted aleobe!, nitrie acid | from treat Britain and other countries up to| ly ¢ sé onstruct a railway forty miles seek, wheres they penetrate with the fam and) is put over the cancer, so that the cancer and a| boot-legs and tebacco, and will upset a maa at) their extravagant War Tax ; aud to remove all| long. Who told the Herald's Provincial eou- saucisson, desr to Geymanic palates,the larver of | small cireular run of healthy skin uext to it was| the distance of tour huadred yards from the | Licht and Pilotave cliarves on American ves.| temporary that our Government could afford to these extozga pase into the blood, their size being! exposed. Phen a plaster made of chloride of zine, | demijobu. : Po sar | : Bm mierescopje as to epalle theur to penetrate | blood root, (Sanguinaria Canadensis) aud wieat evew into te mminutest veius ; they lodge in the | flour was spread ou a piece of muslin the size of neevew inthe gitecular and cellular tissues, and | this circular opening, and applied to the caucer for | a : ... |leze; and (as the order of the paragraph in his | the celebrated Isish authoress, Mrs, 8. C. Hall. thousand pounds in the course of a year for mil!-| : ' ; . : : , , cE Se : a i letter showed) of the filthy langva re and seurri- | [t will be concluded in our next No. We con- import tary purposes and useless delecations, can sure-| * - i \ lous epithets applied on too many occasions | fidently recommend it to our readers as an ) heretofore by the Colonial Secretary and others, | admirable sketch of Lrish character. to the Roman Catholic Religion and its Clergy ; | ~ re ayes | >. | SomerHine uy THE Wixp.—The New Orleans ; | Times says that the Federal Navy Department testant was rather called for by the tenor of | is engayed in refitting and preparing for active — these remarks than from any desire to intro-| service, eleven iron-clads at that port, and that so that the reading of the letter from the Pro- je Dap LUM ees FSi 2 sels—with the use of otr Fisheries to American | Spend twelve or fourteen thousand pounds in praid ji ‘ 4 London: “There | - . ‘ Dr. Pasey said Just in wth of Lendor Ther fishermen for all time to.come: and there is the course of a year, for the purpose above are places in London, as 1 bave myself seen, | | : named ? teed uponitham: ports of the humana organization, | wwenty four hours. On removing it the cancer will eansiing fearful agony and great constitutional dia-| be tound to be burned into, and appear of the tuchance, whieh evtlain death. No eure has beew) colour and harduess of an old shoe, aud the eircu- fa yet discovered, but the preventative process | lar rim outside of it will appear white and par- | where, for generation after generation, the name | uot One word of any advantage to the Colonies | of Christ has never reached, and their inhabitants | jn reference to registration of shipping or the | had much better been born in Caleutta than in | aatth’ trad x ap > . London, because the charity whieh send forth jcoasting trade, Now, if any of our manufae- se wbviows. To abstain from such preparations of | pork as are eaten ina semi-crude state is a sure meanset aspiding “ trichinesis ;";but to eat half- | eroked sauctsson and raw ham, eut in thinslices, | A as geperal wcustom in Germany as smoking or, beer-drinking. Henee the rapid propagation of | Met disease, as a ciuiple slice of day or German Sansagimesy contain larva: of milliows of these | parivsites. i) rr oreo THE GROW TH OF POPULATION. * In forty years, in the Uuited States, Great Britain and France, from 1820 to 1860, the popu- lutivn is shown te Lave increased as follows :— —————~ boiled, as if sealded by bot steam. The wound is now dressed, the outside rim soon seperates, and the cancer comes out in a hard jump, abd the place heals up. The plaster kills the cancer, a0 that it sloughs out like dead flesu, and never grows again. The remedy was discovered by De. Fell, of London, and has been used by hin for siX Or eight years with unfailing suceess, and not | a Case bas been known of the re-appearance of the cancer when this remedy hag been applied. * a a Ozone and Heavru.—Lastly, we gather from what bas gone before, a few facts bearing on hy- gienic measures, general and special. We may learn that as ozone is used up in crowded locali- Christian missionaries wonld the sooner reach | tures go into the United States, a tax is to be them. — - —o oe The emperor of China, vot eontent with a palace as large as some towne, inside Pekin itself, and avother vast palace end dominion, at a few miles distant, has a park surrounded with a wall which extends forty miles, close to that city. — Toe The people of Leyden, Holland, recently made a raid on the cats of the town, and in one night slew 600. The feline race had Of late wultiplied to such an extent in that city as to become a re- gular nuisauce. —-— Se Lenis Napoleon's private theatricals cost him |imposed equal to their internal tax,. which, ‘in most cases, would amount to a prohibition, for thy the time our manufactures would be charged | with freight, commission, insurance and other l expenses, how would it be possible for any article to eompéte with the American manu- factures, chérgeable with their internal tax, “As {far as this Island is coucerned, the little mauu- factories that haye struggled into. existence under the present small protective duties would } | has been foolish enough to throw away twelve no such thing. But admitting, for the sake of argument, that the Government of this Island or fourteen thousnd pounds in one year—is | that any reason, I ask, that it should, every | year, for an indefinite number of years, throw away a far greater sum ona railway that affords no reasonable prospect of paving even its working, expenses. The committal of one folly aifords no argument for the committal of another and a greater one, The editor of the TFerald tries to convince his readers that the more money the Govern: Our Government can afford to do The second | they are rapidly approaching completion, “Tt he Saghng teh hich I will on (is also stated that military orders have heen OMISSION 1s & hesolution which t will transcribe, | issued requiring vestels bound for Rio Grande which was proposed, seconded, and passed at} to call at Galveston in order to conyey troops duce it en the part of the reader. jaad in the opinion of all persons knowing the that mceting—was noticed at greater Jength, District, has had more to do in determining tne It is well known that those who got up the Requisition | to Mr. 1. never called a public meeting to con- | late Election than all else besides. sult the Electors on the propricty of so doing, but sent persons with it from house to honse, cautioning the bearer, I presume, to pass by the residences of those not known to be alto- This gether of the same opinion. conduet to the Mexican border. " ~~ _>-+- — The Queen has been pleased to approve 0 Mr. Joseru Covert, as Consul at Prince Ed- ward Island, for the United States of America. “EVENTS TRANSPIRING,” To rune Eprror or tur Examiner. Sin :—These words I have eulled from an article which appeared ina late number of a Weekly Periodical published in this City—and having a doubt in my mind as to the proper 820. 1860. | ties, and as its presence is essential for the remo | 17 Yyy franes for each performance. he swamped with American articles, more so} ment has at its disposal for improving roads, iS Elaine ts iadnies. toil dladed 26D 'e. te application of the word transpiring by the writer Whited States..........9,633,191 31,445,080 val of the products arising on rrr SE gram ar jthan at present; for it is by a great demand supporting edacation, and purchasing the lands | * ae me ode ar. M1 S. Fe) of the article alluded to, | have a strong desire ed. dan; 2° ho BU AG0875 — 36-775,371| Banic remains, no mere attention bo ventiation, | 1 i. Low stated that Simeon Draper realized | a ad f the nroncivtoss ani turn very doubtiul — to have thet doubt removed. +--- . - OAT, fhe Gaciata : ; ‘ ‘that manufactarers mnet small coun.| of the proprictors, the less will be expende ‘ t : rent ‘ISritnin.-.. ....20.802,670 — 98,8x7 5x7 | however important that may be, \ ara $500,000 from the offics of Collector of the port | ” ~ on a (qtvompese ie quail. eben < eo BG l amet we ** Resolred, ‘That it is the opinion of this My ideais, that an event cannot fronspire;— - England & Wales. 11,990,322 20,061,725 | make the air a wad accee'bit calthy hte | Of New York. tries with the imports from large ones, even| these purposes, and advoeotes the necessity of meeting that this Electoral District should be | ®n event may occur, for example—any matier : : " oi : " ~ . r ie, igss' towel 5 ‘é . . iB : “ ica ; * " - “ ” Y 7 - « id ; : - , 7 Es - 2. OURTENG oo ~~. - 2p - D0) Se 3,061,320 unless the arte runeyy" aacudl Y “at oo ce : ad with protective duties; and especially in this | increasing our publie debt to five times its pre- | represented in Parliament by persons residing | Or thing, be it what it may, which has been 3. Ireland: .. wevee-GSOL S27 — §,764.543| Of ozone. Hence it ts an absurdity of the worst | Nothing keeps this year in Europe; apples, Ben are . ike deeadl ; | kept secret ealed, and afterwards comes \ Disi " age! nett s , y te > * description to build hospitals for the sick in the sentd. vanes Gheatigth; Wwilbidete: punditiis® ot: Island, where there is no chance for exporting | S¢ot amount, and of sending off the Island} Within may me that the conduct of oe aa ee or = r ae ae ~ siding + ute cS . valitti ’ ’ ’ : ’ ’ ’ 2 F is ‘ mange . ave ii oht, 2 shec ) . may poprdagjon, the some forty. yours, “outsido of the vemenis the as Seon that bas ewig tle wat rot a8 suou as they are put in the storeroom. any surplus for seven or eight months of the annually a large portion of the taxes raised on Saito: auiaie ect calineatarhe ae hes piniaphed aa oa I have always un- : eure, ou ven he ; ‘ y ray aT | uk J ‘ ' : : : 6 oo : ies ¢ s Elec ritho ing co > . . short, . ys incipalcities of Great Britain, viz: London,) ivory x sea of ammoniacal compounds derived Letters fram Manic describe the santlinry étite year, And, Sir, would it be fair to the manu.| it to fill the pockets of British capitalists, in} ed the District, is highly reprehensible and | derstood the true signification of the verb trans- wreche ster, Liverpool, Leeds, Bristol, Birmivg-| trom the living and the dead. Hence buman | f that sity. in "ie La terms. Malignant quiney |facturers of the Mother Country to exact a| order to teach our Government economy. In| offensive to at least three-fifths of the Electors.” | pire to be—*“to escape from secrecy to n0- Saasaeeeennn Aah Dente ' wnt ie Arenas a dwellings bollt on the borders of lakes or pools iid t i SS coalee rad rava a and the hibitory tax heir ls s] hey matters of finance he evidently imagi : hata! I think, Mr. Editor, you will admit, t) had tice. "In the present day, it seems to take a - side ot Paria; and in the United States, outside charged with carbonic debris, or built near manure | ‘ yphy ’ ges, prohilitory tax on their goods, when they are | ™% € ae evi ¥ imagines that a 0 en ee ee oe wider range, which I believe is wrong. What “Be Seine, the ote gh of its fitty priweipol cities; the result is:— heaps, or over sewers, or on ground saturated cholera is spreading rapidly. forced almost Leyond endurance to support an part is greater than the whole, This, I grant, | the proper general rule of requesting candidates say you, Mr. Editor, or any of your learned Ety- . ‘ 13820. 1860. raed phy ka Roms Ya eons aa ee ee a “| Army and Navy for our protection, and that|may be true of newspaper articles and stump | been practised in Mr. D's. call, it is certain he | mologists ? Yours, . « och 2 r a > Me ¥ “Cte. , » _ . ° ° rm * ‘ * a . ; Great Benpy eo Eel ae inte sity, as is Vulgarly supposed, nut because the 1 Che HraMiner. merely to enable us to get a few pence a bushel] | Orations, but very few prosers belieye it to hold | would either not have been called out on this adie ENQUIRER, a «seer ssreee ’ , Use 0: : : * nye . > ee oe > “ Ii Epited Spates en 9.068 181 27,354,287} habitants are conscious ol “ smell,” but because more for our oats, and a saying of a small duty good where pounds, shillings and pence are{oceasion, or having been called, would have sananal Antieinsiaian > oO. ROD e : the air they breathe is reduced in active power, ST ceeeeiieg “et LATEST NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. Whereas thegrov thafpopuletion during the sane fecty yours tv the eight above named principal cities of Great Lritain, jn the capital city of Vrance, and in the Silty chief cities of the United States, is shown tu be.as follows ;—~ and poisons being regenerated around them to which they are constauily exposed, and betore which they full a ready prey.— Dr. Richardson in “ Popular Science Review.” — ee Charlottetown, February 19, 1866 Iy the absence of any local political ques- tions requiring attention to-day, we devote cur on eggs and butter; which would be lost in direct taxation? No, Sir; if we are to have a Treaty and Free Trade, let it be just and equit- able. to ally and my opinion is, that if the It is the opinion of some that our Government has sown quite a sufficient quantity of wild oats, and that it is pretty near time that it began to cultivate a more remunerative crop. That such proper course has not been adopted, is equally regretted hy those who voted against Mr. D. as well as those who supported him; for his straightforward, gentle- —_—_— Bostoyx, Feb. 8. New York, Sth. — City of Washington with Liverpool dates 25th arrived... ..The Great Britain’s eic ht eities pssou7 5 no i TeRarse Seen ror BLASPHEMY.—A | editorial space to the following letters. Tn the | Canadian Government had not shown so much} Having disposed of the matter of “raising the| manly conduct while ‘up East”’ has left its ca as noie Se _ ot ain’s eis 250.9: IR police against blasphe lias j ote ee a a : i ae ; 2 : : ‘an demands » re } , France's capital city ...- ..760,000 1607 84) precea gsi by the Turkish authorities Polen first, it will be seen that the Hon. Mr. Coles | desire for negotiation, and pleasure trips for wind”’ in this off-hand and masterly style, our| impression on the mind of every person who} exeited much attention and severely de- United States’ fity dities.. 570,010 4,090,793) 8 4 the Hergegovine. Every offence of that na-| takes the same view of the proposals for reci- Government Delegates, the Americans would | “smart’’ editor is ready to deal with the other| has had the pleasure of conversing with him. | pressed Mexican securities in London... . .The In Great Beituia the inewease ratio of the cbuntry population is about 4 to 54, while of the city population it ia 4 to 9. In France the in- crenae rativ ef the country population is 4 to Jess than 5, while of the population of Paris it is 4 to almost 9. Jn the United States the increase Fatio of the country population for the same period, although rising to 4 to 12, ia outstripped 8 the inctease of the population in cities, whieh = 4 to nearly 2. But not only do cities outstrip the country in their growth, but great cilies outstrip the smaller cities. In Great }5ritain—Manchester, Liverpool, +, Bristol and Birmingham, have increased un their aggregate pepulation from 539,066 in 1220, te 1,651,075ja 1860, London, in 1820, bad | 1,373,917 whabitants; the same ratio of increase ns those five citie¢ bave enjoyed would give her, in 1360, about two and a guarter millions, but she los gone beyond that mark by halt a million, just | rnough to make + city of the sige of Manchester, Jive next largest io the kingdom, and in !460 had & population ef 2,750,000. . the chief city of § d, bas in-| eredsed three fold in the same period, iar surpass- ing ite ovals, while the country has incarased fitty pe? cent. Dublia has risen from 155,000 to 250,- 100 stendily, derpite the fuetuations of papula- gion. Jn the United States this uniformly imore rapid corcentration of population in the groat Jbrutg) cities than in the eities at large is etiil ynore ety\hingly manifest, as thus :— ture is punishable by a fine of two florins and twenty-tour hours’s imprisonment. But a ‘Turk who speaks blasphemy against the Croas is to be fined twenty floriug, whilst a Christian reviling the religion of the Crescent is only liable to an in- demuity of five. With a yiew to the more be coming exercise of public worsh.p all the wine- shops in the immediate neighbourhood of mosques | or churches are to be closed, [yrstly, all jan- guage calculated to wound the boneyr of other persons reuders the offending party liable to fine abd inusprigonment. ee Wuat Makes a Busue..—lt is some time since the fullowing table, showing the number of pounds of the various articles to a bushel, has goue the rounds. Coming seross it im an ex- change we cut it out, thinking some of our read- ers might wish to preserve a copy :—Wheat, sixty pounds, Corn, stietled, fifty-six pounds. Rye, fifty-six pounds, Oats, thirty-six pounds. Barley, torty-3ix pounds. Buckwheat, tifty-six muds. Irish potatues, sixty pounds. Sweet potatoes, filly pounds. Onions, titly-seven pounds. Beans, sixty pounds. Bran, twenty pounds. Clover seed, sixty pounds. ‘Timothy seel, forty- five pounds, Hempseed, forty-five pounds Blue grass seed, fourteen pounds. Dried peaches, thirty-three pounds. Lendon covers 120 square miles, contains 2,400 miles of streets, flanked by 260,000 inhabit- procity as we did in our last week’s issue. But Mr. Coles, we regret to perceive, attributes the obnoxious proposals to “ Messrs. Galt, Henry & Co.’"—the Delegates from the mainland Provinces. In this particular our friend will ‘find, we think, that he is in error; for theve is not only no proof that “ Messrs. Galt, Henry & Co.’ made the proposals, but there is abun- dant poof of the fact of their having emanated from the American Government without the eonenrrence of the Provincial Delegates. The latest intellizence we have had is, that the De- legates were on their way home from Washing- ton, having fatled to effect a satisfactory ar- rangement for a renewal of the Treaty. This shews, we think, that they have not com- promised the Provinees they represent. Allud- ing to this failure of the negotiations, the Mali- fax British Colonist of the Sth inst., has the subjoined remarks. We may premise that the Colonist reflects the views of Mr. Attorney General Henry, and of the Government of which he is a member :— have been the suppliants before one year had expired, for the fisheries they absolutely need, so as to have a nursery for men to supply their Navy, otherwise they will, in case of war in a few years, be in the same position they were for the want of trained men at the beginning of their late civil war. But, Sir, if we in the Lower Provinces are to be forced into the ac- ceptance of an obnoxious measure, and dictated to by Mr. Seeretary McCulloch as to what duties we shall levy on account of the humi- liating and over-anxious overtures of the Ge- vernment of Canada, it is worse than annexation to the United States; and shows me that the maritime interest is not Confederation with Canada. No doubt the last Treaty was too harriedly entered into by the Canadians, other- wise we would have had the Registration and Coasting privileges granted to Colonial vessels. [ hope the leader of our Government did not agree to this one-sided proposal when attend- ing the Delezation last Fall at Quebec, with the Governor General presiding ; but, from the parts of his subject. As he has no “ Provincial contemporary” to furnish him with an answer to the question : Where js the traffic of the railroad to come from ?—he labours yery hard to frame one ior himself, Instead of enquiring into the The tenor of Mr. Dayies’s letter might lead some to infer that beeanse he “ had opposed applying the public money to any sectarian purposes,’ his opinions on this question ‘were viewed with that holy horror by many pious situation and circumstances of the eountry, and | persons present’’ at Souris meeting, and that news was quickly followed by rere. speech to the Corps Legislatif, whieh open- el on the 22nd... . The official report laid be- fore the Corps Leyislatiff on the State of the Empire, asserts that French soldiers are not m Mexico with the chject of intervention. They went there to redress, not to proselytize.. ... analyzing its resources, he very dexterously, as he no doubt thinks, gets rid of the difficulty by asking the question: “ What supports the rail. ways in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia | If these Provinees were small islands, separated from the mainland by a wide strait — if they were unapproachable by water for five months out of the twelve—if neither of them contained more than one haudred thousand inhabitants— and if these inhabitants were emploved almost wholly in agricultural pursuits, there would be some sense in the question; but as they are large provinces on the continent —as their principal seaports are open all the year round —as the population of each is many times greater than ours —and as they possess more varied and more extensive resources than we The London Times says the solution must come from the United States, It believes the Amerr can Government will be cager to select a pace fic solution... . Jt is officially confirmed that Prim and his followers had emered Portugues? Territory. able reports in circulation, as false as ridieu-} Jyydon, Jan. 25th.—The Paris correspon lous; gud it is a pity such is the case,—such as dent of the Thaes gives a minute account & ~ one candidate, contrary to his creed, wanting | Salliard 3 interview with | Napoleon, ard bis ; | hurried departure for Mexico, His instructions, to get elected to walk under an Orange flag,| opal ouly, are to represent to Maximilian enact obnoxious laws, &c.; another, contrary | that the time has active for the withdrawal of ‘the French troops... ..It is reported that the to his creed also, had lent a Roman Cotholic | ch of Gil al Mie Bhi papers ° * — ) - 2 - eatin oO nibson, we scu,y) 0 = dignitary £500, and presented him with £70, or Tt is reported that France ban tendered 1. 80, for the use of his schools or churches, &c. ; | mediation between the Pope and Russia... -- but when the incontrovertible Tact is made! Prince Otho died at Genoa, Jan. 22nd. known that, save one Protestant settlement in| Melbourne, Dee, 26.—there is intense, ¢* oat ‘jtement in South Australia in consequence © the western part of the District, every one of Citement in : " p ; a ‘the Chilian war, and all sales of copper have whom were always very liberal, nearly all the | (oan sto ped... .The Rebels on the east coast Protestants in the District voted for a Catholic | of New Zealand have been defeated and have Not hing could be farther from the truth. It must be ad- they afterwards voted accordingly. mitted, that during the excitement of an election in a country district, there are many unaceount- Forty cight prinaipal cities = 129 aie ars a Seiad ada lean na that “Since a learned the re proposed by the | great secrecy observed with reyvard to that| can boast of, T contend that no parallel can be| candidate, without any political or religious “surrendered. yer eaeee ent es ae ; -: American Commissioners of Revenue of the Amer-! pytgci it won , ’ il fairly draw enna oh i “a ene . hg ner ; e : Reven larger cities... ......206,304 1.452.501) of Uenmark, much larger than that of the King-| Se Pinsient tar Cay efitandiine 48°tha the mission, it would appear that some such| fairly drawn between this Island and those | pledge; and outside this settlement there are | The Chicago Republican believes there is 4 New York. Pevoktyn, Vil “Jianidburg, Jersey City, &e. #B2,67 1,110,410 - to ‘the time of the death of tie date Em ‘ through theee ep ores of vaults. killing five Hanover and Wirtemberg put together—it may deserve it. pi nlc 2 aa he In Philadelphia there are seven thousand five hundred public street lamps. Each lamp con- sumes during the year tweuty six thousand feet of gaa. St is estinuated that one hundred and inety-five million feet are consimed anoually at cost of lwo doilars ber thoysand. , wi haw py uth labou 5 a ts 3 aut rout was rele atthy - F ' - ; = 7 : 4 . Se Rly ag ~ ’ ‘ sie The earrings given to the Russian bride in uow cost £40,000. | eS Pilg, 2 a ae ee on ea dom of Saxony, aud nearly as large as those of | _ ciporeity Treaty, we have felt nota little appre- hension that the Provineial Delegates now -at Washington might be induced to concede more than was consistent with the interests of British America, in order to prevent the shoek to our trade likely to arise from the abrogation of the Treaty. We confess, therefore, that we are rather relieved than disappointed by the following tele. gram from the Hon. Atty. General—i Mr. Henry) reevived yesterday :—‘ Negotiations failed to-day. Committee Ways and Means insisted in preserving j almost profobitive duties on agrictltural produce, | jsuicidat policy had been agreed upon; and ] do not wonder at the Hon. George Brown deserting a Government that would offer to sell the birth-right of the Colonists to Brother jJonathan on any such terms as those proposed by Messrs. Galt, Henry & Co. Tam, Sir} yours, GEORGE COLES. Charlottetown, Ith Peby., 18d. Provinces. The people of this Island want something more substantial to ground their opinions on than vague generalities of” this kind. Let the Jierald indicate to us the sources from which a traflie is likely to spring. Both the editors of the Jerald and the Islander seem to think that if a country be only sufliciently populous, no matter what its extent or Situation muy be, its inhabitants must set about ame a= ; not a dozen Protestant votes polled for Mr. D. ; | general business collapse coming. Tt says: \all his supporters were Catholic—it must ap |“ The universal ane of pe nae ng | pear evident that either “opinions” or religion | the people, the wileemre’ Anes © 5 ing in j ‘ . jand speculation, the fatal facility of rmming j has had nothing to do with the electors of this | 4..1,¢ under various forms of credit, the vast ™ | first District of King’s County. | flation of the currency, aud the enareets If the “ Tory party” were to eease to exist, | portations from abroad, far eprerene ee 'T do not know on whose shoulders the blame |. h8Y for them, all presage . aH tn the mi ‘of the fubrie of seeming prosperity mt of any omission or neglect would be placed. of which this great country is now freely No sooner than any mishap, through waut of joicing.”