( Vol. VEY. “«RENFREW HOUSE,” THOMASS OLD STAND, GREAT GEORGE STREET. DELANY & WILSON, AVING completed their FALL E IMPORTATIONS, per PRtorkess from LIVERPOOL, Urasus from LONDON, and vewels tran BOSTON and HALIFAX, beg to cail the attention of the public to their Eatensive Steck of DRY GOODS, . 7 Groceries, Hardware, Furs, Boots & Shoes, Hats & Caps, &e. Ke. &e. COMPRISING Ladies’ Dress Materials in all the new styles, Coloured and Black Cobourgs, Wincies, Alpacas, Preach Merinos, Delaines, &e. &e. KE Shawls, Manéles, Bownets, Hats, Plumes, Flowers, Ribbece, Bonnet Borders, Gloves, Hosiery, Weolien Heods, Sontags, Skating Caps. Polka and Garibaldi Jackets, &c. Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods, du Cloths, Tweeds, Clothing, Fur Caps in great variety of styles aud quality, Mutilers, Lewbs”’ Wool Under Clothing, White Shirts, Collars, Ties, Scarts, Suk Handkerchiets, Fancy Tweed & Flannel Shirts, Braces, Rubber Cuats, &e. Ke. SrA PLES, Grey and White Cotton, Striped Shirting, Prints Ginghame, Bed Tick, Canvass, Osnaburg, Teweilings, Table Cloths, White. Red, & Fancy Fianuel, &e. &e. &e. Men's, Women's & Children’s edlbre and: deiathe Boots, Shoes & Rubbers, Gentlemen’s Furnishing Goods, in endless variety. Skeleton Skirts & Cane Hoops, Ver) Cheap. GqPPrIOoc bk Tks, Tea (warranted superior quelity), Sagar (very bricbt), Melusses, Tubaceo, Crushed Sugar, , Seap, Candles, Scareh, Pepper, Mus- tard, Baking \ Washing Seda; Raisins, Currants, Spices, c&e. ce. » de. ve i HARDWARE. Cut and Wrought Nails, all sizes, Plough Mount- ing. Chain Traces, Rope, Weaver's Reeds. Paint, Ou, Patty, Glass, Guipowder, Shot, & , &e., A& Homespum taken tu exchange for toods, The highest price pod ia Cash for Fur. wil please WILLIAM FULL J AV ING completed per “ THERESA’ und ** PRIORSSS,”’ his Stock of BRITISH § FOREIGN MERCHANDIZE, PRICES FOR CASH. with any iu the market. His Stock includes, in Stz2ple Dry Goods, Cotton Warp, Grey Cottons, Stripel and White Shirtings, Tickings, Denims, Drills. Fleecy Cot Faney FLANNELS, Towellings, Table Linens W hite and Cofored Damasks, Blankets, Rugs, &c. Dress Materials, [ucluding Wineeys, Plain and Plaid; Cobdurgs Knickerbocker, Fouland Lustres, Camilete, Alex nudra Cloth, Black and Coloured Lustres. &c., &c. with DRESS great Vuarict7. Ladies’ Mantles, Black and Coloured Cloth, Tweed &c¢.; Mantle Cloths & Cloakings, in Black and Coloured Cloths Alexandra Cloth, Seal Cloths, in all quantities. Ladies’ Shawls, Including Cloth, Tweed, Cashmere, Paisley, &c Furs. Sea side boas, Ermine and wite. WLadies prices Ladies Garibaldi Jackets, Soutags & Hoods, Winter Fancy Flannel SHIRTS, c vilars, & Cloth, Felt. &e Boots and Shoes, In Ladies’, Gent's, and Children’s, of all kinds. FAMILY GROCERIES. A larve and vuried assortment! of, comprising prime Comgou TEA, Brown and White Sayars, Coffve Raisins, Currants, &c, &c. &c. The above Goods are offered at Whole sale and Retail, at THOMAS’S OLD STAND. }GREAT GEORGE STREET. WILLLAM FULL. Charlottetown, Nov. 16, 1863 [? 1863. Le Castomers nutice of the Sign particul Great George Street, Charlottetown, Dee. 7, 1563. v rw isl p A LAGE SUPPLY . i : a OF Furniture Warerooms. Wry GOODS ADs Ni) a +c . . 9 GEORGE DOUGLASS, JUST RECEIVED Manufacturer and Importer of Furnitur : se wae ceils and Uphiistery Goods, LONDON HOUSE. iT ESPEUCTBULLY seticits the attention .__ % of such as ave in want of FURNITURE to | * aust at his New and Seactovus Wank-nooms, on the corner of Kent Street and King’s Square, directly opposite the Siuvre of Leor & Sous, aud examine cs good and complete an ASSORTMENT OF FUR NITURE, eouprising designs. as can be founs many new and bexutife! Mw) Lieis City. His long ex perience i he business with facilities for proseenimmyg the san« to advantave, <= Hl. te ASZARD AS RECEIVED, per URANUS from LONDON, GAZELLE, and THERESA trem LIVERVOOL, a and = selected STOCK of ~ iarge combined " wil modersic «xpenaes. cuables him tu sell his GOODS at mea less per Ceut than any other Fur | nitare store tn this Lelar! Every : riche require ) ed af this Kaiablishment. “wed Clothes Wrinvers, « in # good Housekeeper's tui Heusckeeping Bttpoped A few of those celel west convenient article famndry. ; F saat cued Kosewood,7 octavo PIANO | the Mauulacturies, and purchased on the best | UVAIT, Lavdient Make , j | ‘ _ s a aia nie 2 terme, they will be seld at tue LoWisT PRICES | Corner of ea re i se iron CASH, a liberal discount made to 4 er ‘ feet an i & Sy ui ° . Charlottetown. Nov. 40. 1263 & - | sale custowers, comprising @ large Stock of — Supertine aud Winter Cloths & Coatings, Fancy Goods, Jewellery, Stationery. Groceries and Hardware. Tombstones, Tombstones, 7 il t ates es! } Marble Mantle-Pieces, &e. tn all the jatest styles; (Kent Street, next door to Dr. Johnson's ) \ | Ladies’ Dress Materials, in great variety and newest fashions; by the Sabseriber, with neatness gud dis-| dresses ard pieces, Kuickerbocker pateh, and of the very best material. Cloth, French Merinos, Alexandra Cloth, i? MILLSTONES oade to order. i Baratheas, black and coloured, Cloth of Gold, York Repp, Popinettes, &c. Ke. Ke. Shawls and Mantles, in great variety and very cheap; | Bonnets, Hats & Caps, — i J BW dine a large assortment iu the latest fashions; Nore —I beg to inform the Pablic generally > cy that | bare employed No Agent to solicit orders on | RIBBONS, mY ateomnt; therefore cau allord to sell cheap.| Ribbon Velvet, Cotton & Silk, Black and My material and workn uuship are seattered over | Coloured Silk Velvets, Terry Velvets, tre Island, und [ leave it to a disce roing public ta | : Black German Vetlvets, &e. &e. jadge of their merits for shemsel ves. J. € \ ’ , - ——— =. | French and other FLOWERS, Canada Flour. Borders, Cap Fronts, Cambric Handkerchiefs, November Inspection. | 50 Se mee oa Canada / tress Buttons and Trimmings, in % bble Cabiy Biscuit, Turonte manefacture. great variety, Braids, Tassels and Cord, For sule by | Laces, Worked Mustic, Insertion and Edg- J. ROBERTS ECKART, Telegraphic Building, Water-street. | ing, Gloves, Hosiery, Veils, Silk Twist, aed Thread, Reels, &c. &c. eet | FURS — Sable, Stoves! Stoves! | Mink, Fiteb, Chinghille, Kolenski, Opposum, HE au! vi Mock Ermine, Musquasb Riding Boas 7 E subseribers hove now completed their & Cuffs ; Stone Martin, Monkey, Goat Autumn aud Wiater Stock of STOVES, and | aud Seal Tail Muff, &e, Fur Rave ou hand the lurgest stock ever imported by | Gloves and Gauntlets. any ove house in this city, consisting in part of — Mayician, Union, Black Diamond and Friend STAP LE GO' DS — Brown Cot- : ene . tons, Blankets, Flaunels, White and Srriped «rae pep hpeergeaersed Shirtings, Skirtings, Privts, Furnitare Parties requiring any af the ubeve articles are | respectfully requested to ewll and examine wy | Stuck before purchasing le where. fy” TERMS LIBERAL. 43 JOHN CAIRNS. Kent Steet, Charlotte:own, Feb. 29, 1864 Miawuras » Royo! Arch, Broadside, Golden Chintz, Sheetings, Ticks, Sacking, Pare pamatorn ‘yreniom, aud many Scotch Carpeting, Hearth Rugs, tp eaptiag heed ' Mats. Crumb Cloths, Oi) Floor Wood Cook Stoves. ’ Cloth, &e«. Ke. Ke. ° ‘3500 Pieces Paper - Hangings, English make, very cheap and good. READY-MADE CLOTHING, in Over-Coats, Shooting Coats, Pan's, Vests, Shirts, Collars, Drawers, Under &hirts, Water-proot Coats and Sheets, &c. Franklin Stoves for woo! and coal in great variety Cannon Stoves for shop: ap t halla; Pui lor, Cooks, Air tight Narsery aod ied-room Stoves. A grcat Verety of BOX STO\ ES, stitable for s¢houl ' Houses, churches, &e. &«. Entre Pots, fea KRettiesand Jron Boilers. Also extra sets Soapstone gpl Crates for Mayiciah and Haack Diamond Stoves. all of which will be sold! OW cusy fetus, or the lowest possible prices for | Cus DODD > ‘Le bed » . © ROGERS. Dodd's Brick Store, Pown aali., Yor 0. , if QUEBEC PORTER & ALES. _ St. Charles-s eee Th 1H aa ORT Quebec. | Kuives & Forks, Scissors, &c. omas Lloyd. Proprietor. | ALSO, OTTLE ‘2 £ Pp > ! : \ meee: * ne DALES & PORTER, of Tea, Molasses, Coffee, Crushed & Sule in © suit puretusers. arent Moist Sugar, Rice, Peart pm ses G. A. LLOYD. SPPPst Se athe (grown per ie _—s ildiag, Water. groand), Raisins, Currants, Citron, Starch, te “tess — Biae, Blacking, Baking and Washing . Soda, Leather, Tebaceo, Pipes; Buckets, Brooms, Soap, Candles, Indige, Manilla Rope, Pitch, Pitch & Paraiine Ou, Cross and Hand Saws, Chisels, Gouges, Jack, Hand and Bead Plzenes, Brass Taps, &c. &c. Charlottetown, Nov. 16, 1563. ~ SLEIGHS! SLEIGHS! UST RECEKLVED and for Sale by the Subscriber— Putty, Paints, Oils, Turpentine, Nails, Svikes, Brads, Tacks, Sheet Lron, Wire, Gig & Cait Bashea, Chain Traces, Back Chains, Halter Chains, Grey & Wilkie’s Plough Mount mg, Hames, Bridles, Bits, Whips, ae own, P. E. TIMBER FOR SALE. A QUANTITY of PINE TIMBER ti whieh can be deliv -red in Charlottetown 02 | ne opetiug of the navigation. | —— omer | Porty Cedar Sills, lenyth 30 feet, 8 « 10 inches Mare. and 1000 Cedar Posts from 7 to 8 feet long, | “© 19 inches aque j wt further information can be bad. from Mr. | m. Wilson, Charlotteruwn, or the subseriher. i JAMES H. MOORE. West Cape, Lot 8, Feb. 22, 1864, wkly 64 6 AMERICAN BOG vets. NOVICE! _ Charlottetown. Deo. 28,1863. tf of AT BOOKS borrowed from thea ~ - SUGAR! SUGA ik! LEGISLATIVE LIBRARY, previonsly to open, ™ date, be KETURNED before the ng of ihe Sersion on the L6th MARCH L.C JENKINS, Librarian March4, 1864. 4) an Subscriber offers for SALE— 10 Hhds. SUGAR, J. 8S. CARBVELL Charlottetown, Dee 28, 1863. if wuz Broadway, N. 2. | W Ulver ap ty grado wo WE ae Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, March 28, ING, Liverpool House! | __Dr. W. G, Sutherland, — | Ts returning thanks for the very liberal ee ne ee ee ee ee LITERATURE, | Yet I could not but agree with the coun-| well, Michael! and you, good tess that the eurliest opportunity of getting go with me, you say? My mother ought’ » faint cheer as we reached the striped flsg- the young man safe over the frontier ouzht| not to have asked so dangerous a service staff. and were safe from our enemies. A Weekly Hournal of Politics, Literature, and ews. nt te See ee a New Series.---No. 17. doétor—you | something like excitement, for they gave us { patronage bestowed since commencing business, | } - trusts that the same may still be continued towards | him. He wishes further to&tate bis present large ' 5 a THE BROOK. stock of DRUGS and CHEMICALS, choice | Perfumery, Toilet Articles, &c. &e. The best des |eription of every thing coumected with the trade, »| selected in LUNDON trom the best establishments | | by those competent of doing jusiice to the business The Dispensary Department will be under his own innnediate superintendence. })r. Sutherland begs also to observe that he trusts | the fact of having practised in Scotland several | years, and nearly tweuty years of extensive colonial | At the mountain's sweet breast nursed, Looked o’er the ledges shily, A scared wild thing at first. Below the enamored valley Beckoned and waiting stood, Till the brook’s feet silver-sandalled, should paapyes the reason. ‘to be embraced. How to effect his escape from you, Burton. A waif of the dews aud the showers, /was not so clear. Prussia was not fur off,| wolves wheo they scent blood and plun- but the frontier guards were on the slert, | der y jaud so were prowling detachiwents of Cos. | sacks. Money, horses, and a disguise, had [ bad promised, and even bad 1 wot promis- to be provided ; and we dared uot remove | ed, [ would not have abandoned him in his) any horse from the custle lest the groows weak state. He wrung my hand. and mount- ed without further parley. Tliese Cossacks are The GOODS having been purchased on the best Terms, are contidently offered to compare tous, Printed Cottons. Ginghams, Red, White and | ROSE & McINTYRE, { select assortment of, in Mountain Martin, at all | | Fashionable Felt Hats,Plaimand Fanev Bonnets,&e. | | Vests, Gloves, Collars, Scarfs, Bonnet Ribbons, all In ready-made CLOTHING, in yreat variety; Gloves, Ties, Scarfs, | HATS & CAPS, in Fur, Fur Trimmed, W. A. JOHNSTON E, ee FALL & WINTER GOODS | Stand formerly Dempsey’s, opposite Apothe- cary's Hall, Upper (Queen Street. j yracticein every branch of his profession, combined Now offers the same to the public at tie LOWEST | with unremitting assiduity and personal attendanee, | | will not fail to obtain confidence and ensure satis (faction. [gy Advice to the poor gratis Queen-sireet, Ch'town, P. E. Island, 2 December 7, 1863. 5 | FE. P. NORTON, . Auctioneer & Commission Merchant, GEORGETOWN - - - P. E. IsLAND General Commission Merchants, | , S88 Cedar-street --- New Vork. * . al " WT ; rep “AY e, kel TRIMMINGS and LININGS in| PARTICULAR ATTENTION to Sales of OATS and other PRODUCE, and purchase | ot Merchandize for the British American markets. | »} street, New York; Messrs. Elliot & Co., 16 Lemvine- ;| street, Montreal; Hon. P. Walker, Charlottetown, | P. KE. Island | _ June lo, 1863. JOHN & ROBERT SCOTT, Coach & Sicigh Builders, Ment Street, NFORM the inhabitants of Charlotte- OuKement Meixtryne. s town and the Country geuerafly, that they have | jnow on hand a number of new ald second-hand | CARRIAGES, open wud covered, of different styles which will be sold cheap for prompt payment. ce All erders punctually attended to. ‘| April 14, iSe2. Late of Halifax, N.S. Attorney and Barrister-at-Law, Notary Public, Ke. Ke. Te Orrice -— Mrs McDonald's, next door to Mre Forsyth’s, north side of Queen Square. Charlottetown, October 21, 1863. ‘Marine Insurance Company PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. { Incorporated 4th April, is6és. PRESIDENT: WILLIAM HEARD, Esevine. DIRECTORS: HON. DANL DAVIES, | HON. JAS. C. POPE, Refer to— A. N. Brown, Esgr., 185 Greenwich- | Stole down to the maple wood. iat : . ; Ab ! little one of the mountain, | like dawed crystals on every pool and ren The beeches, and sassafras, And eveu the sad pines, nodded, As you merrily tiukled past. Lillies and slender grasses Hand in hand trooped with you, walking for were pleasure. | While the slow-footed ferns nud mosses Rested, but follows you too. i lite my : | up. fen, looking back, we saw | Cooled by the upland breezes, vheres, There was a good deal of snow on | P - 8 " Yet holding the slumberous glow } Of the south sun slopes in your bosom, beside an enormous pile of rudely hewn | ‘he rays of the wintry sun. logs, did not ol serve my approach, | Our speed. Tt was well, since the valley entreated | Six out of the eight thousand iin! ‘Steady, Burton, steady ” Au Eden, to crown you its Eve, Child of the fire and the snow ! |are mine! That accepting iis sweet adulation, bird, I do not choose to be cheated of my |our lives, j You love, aud love's guerdou receive. | — —~ | THE POLISH DESERTER. ( Conciuded.) | It was long before the patient could find shall have wade Kalisch too hot to hold ge.’ | horse and man, keep to the right. It was Glittstein’s voice. rative of his escape aud the cause of his! way desertion, It was a tale not merely of pri- | Trtat ebaateratce | Vation and toil, and barbarous warfare on | Hebrew robe, ‘The latter drew out a folded | Jet.” _ ro | rugged frontier, but 2 — insults, un- | paper, east a quick giance to left aad right, | _ Emile had ridden with his greyhounds or eee an > aan purpose | sad banded the paper to Gilittstein, suy ing, | Is gun over most of the country arouud, |to break the spirit and crash the heart of ‘in a coaxing tone, in German : and his kuowledge of its localities did us in- every one of these unfortunate exiles. fle) « There, there, excellent brother Glittstein | Htte service. At times he seemed at fauls. jhad fought aod marched. had endured the | __be pacified, I pray you. Here is a pro- | ut his memory would soor revive, and he hardest details of a hard life, with an un-| wise under the governor’s own hand and | woah resliaes every Rent atk GEE athe fliuching and uncomplaining courage that|..41 Six thousand roubles, and promotion | difficult district. Bat fast as we went, we was due to bis clish pride, bat he had b-en in the Warsaw police office. Youare to be could not shake off the peresera, It was at last comipeilec to become * dustek,’ or | , commissary, aud in the secret department, impossible to help noticing, with a sort o: ent dng to a Russian major, on the day when Kwile Oxiuski is brought auwilling admiration, bow warily aud well He Was a ornel coward, the most hated ‘hefore the court-martial. Come, good. those wiid horsemen made their way through of all our tyrants.’ said the young mau, |feiend, we mean fairly by you. Do you, on. the broken g:ound, scenting: danger with an feebly : ‘he taunted me, he spoke to me as your part. be ready to point out the hiding | Mstinet that never erred, Their long habi: if I were his'dog ; he mocked my country | place of the youug count. of ranging savage plains made them tully a and my creed ; he made ny tasks, and the | man mal be bere.” match tor Kmile's experience. bread I ate, us bitter and as odious as “| [think the wretch said more, but I had At Ewile himse'f I looked with some anx- petty despot could. One day he s:ruck Me) heard enough. 1 withdrew as silently ax | iety, I knew that be was weak, muc across the face with his cane. Next moment | yay approached, and hurried back to the| weaker than he would allow, that his left he lay at my feet calling for hep, aud I fled.” jouse. (o five w mates the countess kuew arm was stiff and painful, and that he bad in a Jewish dress, but whose flar | 228le. A tight rein, Io an hour our HON. W. W. LORD, | HON GEO. BEER, JAMES DUNUAN, Esq. | HENKY HASZAKD,Ese i } SECRETARY: DANIEL J. ROBERTS. | (> Risks takendaily at the Offices in Water-street May 4 Queen Insurance Compan | OF LIVERPOOL - FIE AND LIFE! FENTIE Subscriber, having been appointed avent for the above first class Insurance Com lin the woo liow he bad formed the boid resolve tu | aij, Glirtsrein’s treachery was clear, audit | lately shown symptoms like those of incipient regain his home in West Poland, penuiless | was also evident that by scme means, per- consumption. He was pale, with a bectic aud on foot; fhow ke had journeyed, hiding jhaps by dogging his mistress, or myself, or | Spot on each cheek, and his breath came oe by day, aud travelling by | both, in our trequeut visits to the hut where| short aod with effect; but his eye was night 5 oo the peasants had sometimes the young mau jay concealed, the faise | bright and fearless,aud he sat ihe fiery chest- sopea oll team? ik ‘aa ct Sowa Ww | vlece. Lhere was little leisure for thought. On we went, Over rough and smooth. j afd ; all this be told in simple | [y one short bour the soldiery would arrive, | pow floundering through a suow-bank, now and modest fwords. Also, bow he : changed el with a Malorossian seri, who had giver} him an old caftan aud cap in 'men, The countess bore the cruel tidings} bogs; “Mmossgrown “stones, “aid” the tough exclaimed | tain Luspeetor ' Remember that! Lf L trap the | J°8%%® Oginski. ‘A stumble may cost Us| eware of that green bit of fair share of the roast, Isaac. The place is ground where the snow has thawed away ; too good a one to lose gratis; besides, || 't 18 a bog that would swallow a Sama who lefi us in the nearest village, wishing a} I bent for. @USt push for the causeway that spans that | had land the wood won!d be surrounded by armed | dashing through such a collection of peat ‘Your passports, Mein Herreo? Then you are prisoners in the name ef bis Majesty of Prassia,’ said the sergeant who com- I assured him that my mind was made up. manded the post, swelling with official pom- posity. For a minute or two I bene 40 fear that our dearly bought liberty about to be rudely cut short. Emile, how- ' | Away we went ever, knew better than L did with whom he Three months after Emile’s arrival, on a| #/ong the ride, the frozen snow crunching | ha4 to dea!, and, by « judicious investment crispy frosty morning, when the ice sparkled | beneath our feet and the dry branches crack- | ing. Quick as we were, we had scarcely ‘let of water, and the snow apon the dark | qnenges from the forest into a region of ‘our behalf the sympathies of pine-bows gleamed doubly white and pure|™0rass and scrubby brushwood, beyond in the sunlight. [ set off to walk to the | Which gleamed, iron grey, the frozen lake lodge. No one iu Poland ever dreams of | of Vartha, when a long-drawn whoop rag ingly, when, an bour later, the To account fer | ‘rough tie frosty air, and was followed by |my being often aloof, L always carried a | ‘Wo oF three twanging notes of the trumpet, | isn police came up to demand in the 'gan, and occasionally shot a few squirrels or W4ick imperious calls for stragglers to close | name, the extradition of the deserter o& ing \ the Ugiuski, the sergeant demurred aod the ground, and my footsteps made so little | whole troop of wild riders, some sixty strong, | watised, asked for noise, that two men, in close conversation | Come dashing over the heath towards us, in | of writing tor instructions to head-quarters, We doubied | ani fiually refused to give up of part of the geld with which the Couatess had supplied me, suceeeded in enlisting ia russia guard, who, afier all, bad but v le love for their Russian neighbours. A > | Crossed the river, aud an officer of the impossible proof, tal the fugitives ‘until his ‘high and well-bora. Herr Cap- would decide the point. Two hours later, we were suffered to hire a peasaut’s cart, and to depart for Posea under the nominal custody of a douanier, us @ good journey in return for 6 brace of | golden Fredericks which weve slipped into ward, aud, cautiously peering round the “OT#ss, Or we shall get to a ereck of the | his hand. With some little difficulty, whieh ' ; leorner of the wood pile, beheld the worthy Vartha that cannot be crossed. The ice | re | strength for anything like a continuous nar- ‘majordomo in company with a red-bearded: would bear us, but the banks are rotten and ‘tact and bribery smoothed away, we manag- ‘ed to traverse Prussia, and at Hamburg we and a keen eye for | > matched ill with his; 4ep drifts, aud we sball sleep in Prussia |cmbarked for Kogland,...t have, ot. aaneh | wore to tell, except that my young compan- ion’a state of health became such as to ia- duce his physician to order bim to the south ot Hurope, an that at Lisbon he was ‘by the Counc and Countess Oginski, as soon jas the Kmpéror wo-ld give permission to | the former to reside out of ia. “ This /was at length obtained, partly, L believe, in consequence of an uovaruisbed aceount of ‘the e:reumstance of Kumile’s desertion com- ‘ing to the Ca.r’s ears, At aby rate, after a year’s time, it was intimated that Count Emmanuel might please himself as te bis residence. _ The parents of Emile were oniy too deeply grateful to the Nog!ist#doctor for the service he had rendered to theirson. As I declined a considerable annuity which the Countess ‘proposed, it was settled that L should re- side at Miklitz, as masager of the estate aed ‘all its weasth of salt mines, with fall ‘and a liberal salary. This offer 1 gladly closed with, and | am happy to say that the | value of the property has steadily tet /uoder my care; while this sudden accession. lof fortune has also enabled me to mary Alice, } j | MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. A letter from Pictou to this bravely, uerving herself, for ber sow’s sake, | gnarled roots of furz: and broom, as | should | ** There tas been great rejoicing in this town | property puny, is prepared to take risks on al! des -riptious of |to be calm and resolute. J. 8. CARVELL. ‘exchange for \his uniform coat; and how, j i ’ ; t * We might resist,’ she said, with a bright" Charlottetown, Feb. 10. u a | soon alterwards, the tid-engs of his ercape | ing nrece i ; 20 sued | . | | having preceded him, be had been pursued | but steady eye, glascing over the snow-en- | combered plain. ‘bere are pine true) | by a troop of Cossicks, and had received | | Poles amony the servants, and Michael, and [ExTRacts From NewsPaPens.]} : y ; i ! ag ,/ tis wound from one of their musket balls On reference to a return made to Parliament. and |be sorry to bave traversed ia cold bloud;/ on the succes of the Pietou aud every instant a stumble, which no care could avoid, all but brought the horses to their knocs. We reached the causeway; a straight road, embauked with rough stones, way B:tl, and L can assure you that your advocacy of | the measure has gained for you many warm | {riends, standing alone as you @id, for many ears advocating the measure irrespective of All having been carefully selected direct from | ARBLE WORK of all kindsexecutead, SILKS, black and coloured, in a choice selection, | Stone Martin, HARDWARE--Iron, Stecl, Glass, | ardered by the Ilouse of Commons to be printed, 7t! o BRITISH DRY GOODS, — [icr'tie year, pait Uy che “QUEENS wae 20s | cing upwards of £1000 more than paid by any other ollice ever yet established in this City. {From Gore’s General Advertiser, Oct. 24, 1861.) | * Indeed, we believe that we are pe rte etly justi fied in saying that no other Company, within the same period, ever attained so larye un income it whole- | either the Pire or Life Departments as the Queen | } mother saw him. Insurance Company. Io making this statement.we }mauke no exception even in favor of our older local | sompanies, pumely, the Liverpooi and London, the | } . ‘ , Royal, aud the Lancashire Insurance Companies. jFrom the Civil Service Gazette, Nov. 2. 1861.} * Amony these important institutions’ stands emi- | nent for its solidity, as well us for its snecess, “the | Queen Insurance Company,’ which last week held | its annual meeting of proprietors iu Liverpool. 4 reference to the auple report in another pave will | i fully sutisty every reader of the siynal progress | made by this associution since its foundation. Such | snecess is, indeed, rarely attained ; and it attests at | ouce the excellence of its management, andthe pab | | lic contidence in its constitutien.”’ | |} {From the Liverpool Mercury, Nov. 2, 1861.] | “It must be gratifying to the public generally, | and especially to the proprietors, to find that its in- | {come during the past three years hus increased at | | the rate of £20,000 per annuin. We believe that | ne other Company, within the same short period, | lever attained so large an increase either in the Fire jor Life Department. This speaks highly for the | activity aud zeul of the management, while the | | promyptnese with which ail the claims, arising eut | | ? } } j | i }of the late disastrous fire in London were met. tes | tities to their tinuneial ability and the care and pra- | dence which marked theinvestment of these furds "’ ‘The Liverpool and Lonjon | | | FIRE AND LIFE 7 Y . - | INSURANCE COMPANY. | | hee Agevt for the above first class English Fire Insurance Company begs to | l call the attention of the public to the advantager | | offered by this Company, in respect to the security | to the assured, and preuptness to pay losses, which, | without dispuruging other Companies, may be safely jasserted to be superior to those afforded by any | | other Company in the [stimd. The Liverpool! and | Loudon F. & L. Insurance Company has been in successful operation since 1836, with agencies all | over the world, and has paid in losses about two | millions and a quarter sterling. Its subscribed ca- | pital is £2,000,000 sterling, and its invested funds | jalone amount to £1,312,000 stg.; and the tire pre- | | miwmstor IS6Lamount to £360,130 LoeGd: and in ad- | dition to this very large capital, the Company, ! | having been established before the recent Limited | | Liability Act, the individual fortunes of each of the | shareholders, comprising some of the weulthiest | | werehants in Liverpool and London, are liable for | | the losses, should the whole of the capital be swept | laway. Jo this respect it ditlers, it is believed, from lany other Company established here. | And lastly, the Agent being appointed by Power | | of Attoruey directiy from England, is authorised to | draw Bills the mowent a loss occurs, and without referring to the Home Company, to the exteut of | one thousaud pounds sterling. With these superior advantages, the Company is | not disposed (tthough it might be well justified) te faska higher rate of premium than other baylish Companies, which do not present the same advan | taveous fentures, and the Ageut has been advised | that an uniform rate has been agreed upou by the Directorsof this Company and the * Queen's,” aud l that the Avents bere shonid, in this respect, * act | in Concert.”’ W. A. JOHNSTONE, j Agent of the Liverpool and London } “Nov. 10, 1862 Fire Insurance Cowpeny. ne i | Worth American Hotel, Hent-street, Charlottetown, PENIS HOTEL, formerly known as the “GLOBE HOTEL,” is the largest in the City, and centrally situated; it is now opened | for the reception of permavent and transient | Boarders. ‘The subscriber trusts, by strict atten- tion to the wants and comfort of his friends and the public generally, to werit a share of public patronage. t2 The Best or Liquors always on hand. Good Stabling for any number of Lorses, witha caretul hostler in attendance. JOHN MURPHY, Proprietor. Ch. Town, P. E. 1., Nov. 25, 1563, ly DENTISTRY. R. STRICKLAND, having retarned to the Islund, will resume the practice of DENTISTRY. Office—Great George street, three doors from the water. Office hours from 10 am to 4 p.m. j Decewber 7th, 1863. while in the act of scrambling up the sieep jand crippled feet to the dour of bis father’s legally be coutiscated unless he had been | horses, closed the Joor and mounted. -bered to a wall or tree. ill aicelin th AIA tes de aeenah the fuur mowers, and Karel ihe smith, and | , y ne the tal! sawyer and his son, with Demetrius | which had bidiled the horsemen. ; Finally jae the farm, and ail the quarrymen. | how, famished, cramped in every joint and Twenty-five good muskets, and a breustwork sinew, be had cragved himself witu bleeding | oy tees as the axe would pile up in half an house, at which he had not dared to knock _— _ oe ee vere es ver . imy good, kind husband. Fight is the only . j ; hoa te | y Milos } und was watching the windows when his| hope! Yet Emile is weak and ill yet—and | to fiy alone ; * Not §lone; I will go with him,’ I ex- A gallant lad he was. slender and grace- | ful of tivare, rather active than strong, and/eclaimed; ‘he is not sirong enough to eu-| with a handsome face enough, when once it|dure alone, bat with my help [ think he! om it, and some trees, und a flagstaff? That began to lose the gauat, famiue-stricken way make shift. By striking through the | louk which it wore at first. When the crisis woods, io four hours time we may touch of his illness was past, and his reeovery be-| Prus-ian ground. The horses , ;earth, rather a mound than a hill, and yet) came ouly a question of time, we contrived } Here the countess interrupted me in turn j i . | ‘Ms . ; as to remove him to a lodge in the forest, a} hastily informing me that the men-servants | mile or more from the castle, which Was! were all gone to a wedding in the village, | me » wife had | tenanted by a woodsman, whose wife had snd that L£ could remove two strorg horses | Even as she spoke, | been his nurse. These good people were | without being observed. wholly teustworthy, aud would bave borne | she unlocked a cabinet, and drew out a Struggle through, but the distance was not! torture or death, | believe, sooner than be-|neavy purse of gold, which she bad pro-| . op pail ' tray their young lord. ‘They cared for him | vided to aid Kwile’s escape, and which stie with the utmost affection ; and Michael, the : ark mee | put into my hands, with a thousand thanks | woodswan, actually relinquished his Sunday | yyq blessings, and fond messages to her son, | visit to the brandy-shop which a Jew kep'| mingled with entreaties that L would not in the viliage, lest he should in bis cups let jlose au instant. I rushed down stairs, | slip any uy wary allusion. The winter had now set in with mach se- | to the s'able, and hastily saddled two horses ; verity, but Count Kiwmanuel did not return | the black whieh 1 usually rode, and a fiery | from St.Petersburg. His letters were few chestnut of great fleetuess and power, My | and cautiously worded, as if the writer | fingers trembled so much that | could hardly | knew that they would have to pass the or-! adjust the bridles. As I buckled the last deal of the Secret Scrutiny Bureaa in the |strap, the open door was filled by a dark Russian post-office ; but he spoke of occa- figure—Giitistein! I had just turned the sional interviews with the ministers and the! cnestnut in hie stall, and the eyes of the) ewperor, and of his bope that be mizht soon | major-domo met mine, and each of us read be able to quit the metropolis. Of bis son|in the other’s glance that his secret was) he suid little, and that little was cold and kuown. artificially expressed; not tnat the coust) An evil look came over Glittstein’s face, Was without paternal wffection, but because|and he strode forward and snatched the of the strict supervision uader which he, as bridle rudely from my hand, saying : the father of a ‘delinquent,’ was placed. | ‘Nein, nein, Herr Koglander; your Emile could walk now, though not very pretty little pleasure-trip is spoi-ed.’ vigorously, nor was it deemed wise for him) I bave never clearly remembered how I io stir abroad. A proclamation bad been did it; but in a moment the spy lay yrovel- largely circulated in the province, offering | ing on the floor, with my foot ou bis brea-t. a reward of eight thousand roubles — four Glittstein was a cowardly creature, and | times the amount first proposed — for the begged for merey in abject language. He capture of the deserter Ogiuski. So high offered no resistance when | bound his a price would never have been set on him, | hands tightly with an old girth, tied to one vi course, but that he was a man of rauk,! of the wooden piilars, and bide him stir or and heir to a fine esate, which could notjspeak at his peril. I then led out the As |) tried und convicted of desertion and mutiny. | did so, wy horse laid buck his car-, snorted, | Emile, knouted and imprisoned in Siberia, | aud pawed the earth, and the fiery chestnut would lose his civil rights, and the state neighed long and shril. To my dismay, might inherit at Couat Kmmanuel’s decease ; the neigh was answered by other horses alar but Kwile at liberty and across the borders, | off, and then eame a long wailing note of could not be so summarily disposed of. In| the Cossack trampet. The Czar's blood- such « case, the Czir could only condemn | hounds were before the hour uamed for the him as * contumacious,’ and the property rendezvous, I darted into the wood, the | would hereafter be sequestercd, instead of red horse rearing aud pluugivg. and giving permanently confiscated. me some trouble. Looking back, | saw a The proclumation was affixéd to trees, flash of steel between the trees of the posted up in markets, and made widely avenue, and [ heard Glittstein, who bad knowa, but all in vain. Many of the greedier probably caught the sound of the trampet-_ peasants and of the Jewish inhabitauts were call, bawling in the stable and roaring io ramored to bave expressed a longing hope German and Russian for help. that such a prize might fall in their way ; Emile, when { arrived at the lodge, was but the laborers on the Ogiuski estate tore not mach,surprised by the sudden summous down every one of the detested placards te fly. He came to the door, accompanied within their reach, and the fierce Slachsiz, by Michael and bis wife, boil utrering ex- | or peasant nobles of the provioce, made no clamarions of alaru, while the childrea set secret of their intention to put to death any up @ wail of terror. traitor who might betray young Oginski‘ [ have been expeeting this for many a inte Muscovite hands. Some sach threat,’ day aod vight, doctor,’ said be siniling. * 1 ill written and il! spelt, but penned in s'ern lope to essape, if owly for my poor movber's earnest, was (o be seen scrawled at the foot sake, but in no case shall they take me alive. | of every copy of the munifestu that yet ud- Give me the pistols, Michael ; L loader them iyesterday. Farewell, Nurse Katriui! fare- |= pgs puveay vi WA BENEY, WU Ue Hee Seemtew ge re a - we | pine-wood, and galloped up a narrow path _ across asi! to bar our way, avd half blinded | _selves from bough and sapling. ‘pluoge in. a, ¢ marty politics. It was ecertaialy om . and built of pine logs and b rehed fazgots, a as samo time, pleasing, ceo ann with earth and pebbies rammed into the in-| extreme views grasping cach other By the 'erstices —a work that dated from the reigy | hand, and offering their congratulations on of Johu Cassimir. It was old and out of | the result; and I think it safe to say, that repair, rottes in many parts, and full of | ‘He extreme party views, entertained by men dangerous holes partiy concealed by the |°" bath wikee:e! thie eeentyy aan eae aren ee ee Jy ‘end, and that both wili unite ecrdially in snow, but it was a weleome exchange for | farthering the interesta of this Provinee.— the broken surface of the moor, and we sped Halifax Express, March 16. ou, ! —_ +3. o—— “ You see that hill, doctor, due west, and| The news from St. Domingo is favourable ; beyond the pine-wood, with a waite evttage | to the Spanish. A battle had taken place at Moluso, at which the Royalist troops surpris- 1. een ene ed the rebels, rushed on them, destroyed “ L did ‘& ant ange @ dy teit camps, and put them completely to did see the low swell of the sandy fizht. The revolting pedple of St Domiogo had received ammunition and supplies from miles over the monotonous | vessels flying the English flag. This fact has But, between us and it was | aroused some ill feeling in Cuba agaiost beyoud which Kugland. Itis alleged that many fawilies Toere #04 andividuals, despairing of the success of = os ee re Se aoe to | the Spani cers, and prom to sp nize the legitimate Spaowh authorities, gress. Emile spoke again, alter a glance | Pyis information comes through interested to the rear, | channels. “ How those Cossack fellows are closing | up? How their ponies go! Steady! they Tha Boston Post, in common with other : he range.” | Northern journals, mourns over the disus- bave got t g ; b Of the Sort ; i . ..| trous bagimning e Spring campaign, A shot came whizzing past us as Oginski pig Pose sums up the February soleane® visible for many flat jandscape. a dark stretch of forest, gleamed something bright—water! was a river to ford, then, and a wood t jcatching up a whip as L passed the ball, ran | spoke, and I started as 1 beard the peculiar | + Butier’s project to relieve our prisoners at hiss of the bali blending with the loud and, Richmond tailed. Kilpatrick's miscarried— threaten'ng hurrah of the pursuers. I look-, We bave had a cruel defeat in Florida. ed round. ‘They bad gained on us, and | Swith and Grierson have retarned'from Oko- were fearfully near. ‘Two more cereee ee Prem trina: Home ye oe Nero te by were fired, and then we plunged inta the harted back from the ragged onan a Dal- ’ ' wes ton ; and jast and worst, the gallant Sherman that seemed to lead towards the river. Tere has returned to Vicksburg. Grant’s late de- was not room for us to advance abreast, so | monstrations from Chattanooga appear now - we hurried on in single fyle, stooping our! to have been but demonstrations. Nut one heads to avoid the branches that stretehed Success out of all these cliances.”’ _- -- ~~ DS oe : | Again the rumour cymes tous that our be- by the stow that we shook down upou our-| —- dovtneigh eenjamplatse aii in ‘ oes Behind us tivor of tie Prince of Wales. The Quesn were the Co-sacks, yelling like hounds closing goog not appear to be able to shake off her re- vu the prey, aed firing random shots, in puynance to return to peblic life. Mor great hopes, no doubt of crippling our horses. We, woe still weighs too heavily upon her spirit pulled up, panting and tora by bramble and to permit the congeniality of the duties of branch, on the bank of the river, [t was ber overwhelming sorrow. Much as the Bri~ not frozen. It rolled on, deep and dark,!"*" ae oe pr gewgewhecg but behind us were the howls of the Rus. baadigtieues tn ssereenh a a sian troopers, and we could not hesitate to og i¢ indispensable to the persunal comfort of )& Monarch whose happiness her subjects ‘Head bim for the spit of land yonder, would consider no a too great ty en- doctor ; the bank is too steep to Ah ? | ate Quebec ae ete the. gome js wT Gen. Beauregard’s wile died on the 2nd A bullet from the bank mortally wounded | inst, and the funeral on the 4th was the his gallant horse. The poor creature reared , jargestever seenin New Orleans. Over 60u0 aod Hoandered, made ao eff rt to swim on. persons attended, and the cortege was over and then rulied over and sunk, snorting be- one mile in length. Gen. Banks kindly ex- neath the cold water which was crimsoned ‘ended tu the family the use of an eee with his blood. The soldiers set ap a shout ee ee a “The of exultation, Ry great good fortune I had | bay none Milian ail os bp Gvandady contrived to catch Emile by the collar ashe of jadies, who wished to take a farewell of sank, and to drag him free of . the dying one wiu was loved and esteemed by all. horse. It was su awful moment, for the ~anbi- current Was strong, my horse was frightened, | The preser.t Queen of Deamark is a strong. and made feeble way agaiost it, and I, en- | winded woure.e, and the rea! manager of the gdom. She brought absat the cumbered as [ was, conld hardly keep wy kingdow seat, ‘The Cossacks set up another shout, °! bet daughter with the Prinee of Wales, : and reeoumended ber eva lor the Greeian aud, while some plunged tute the stream, tirone, Jast now she has her haude full to others renewed their Gre. keep ber busbaod firm in regard to the du- * Save yourself, Burton; sever mind me,’ puwd Duchies. gasped the young Pole, still up to his peck 7 urea as — for they will gwe o.rious parts of Iilimeis are already suwing bo quarter # : ‘their spricg wheat. Tois w anasually carly. But I retained my grasp, a:d in an in- {¢ also Jearns that if the. weather continues staut more, te my surprise the exhaus'ed | fayuurable w large breadth of wheat will be horse toucbed the ground, and [ arged him | put ia. bp mies iigel a! by. voice and heel ap the slope, half drage-| my, Qacen’s Speseh on opening the recent ing, hall supporting my pour patient, whose | ..sgiyn of Parliament was transmitted co strength was goue. The Prussian custom- pPyrig by ive wires. The work was accom- house guard eame hurrying out of their huts, | plished in six mioutes, although the decu- aad their German phiegai was surpiisediuto went coutaiced 1090 words. The Chicago Journal says the (armere in