FF eee ee Oe SlCr OUD” Se. US. UTC Sl rw! aS. a = a ae ¢ & FA ee né fy A Week al . a ————E ‘ He - — Vol. XV. lyn Hournal o f Lolitics, Literature, and dlews. ee **This is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, ha “Charlottetown, Prince — a Se eee eee teem el tooa peony ete tee a ipremaneataeneepe ving to advise Seenchegyeaneenctnesoasmnstonee cart ae = ss the Public, may spon k free.**---Euripides. Edward Island, Monday, March 20, 1865. New Series.---N 0. 16, epee TAITERATURE. WALTING FOR THE SPRING. SALE OF LAND, in Charlottetown and Royalty, on FRI-| DAY, the 2ist day of APRIL next. As breezes stir the morning, THULE following VALUAB Li... coe A silence reigns in air; PERTEBS will be submitted for Sale at! Bteel-blue the heavens above, AUCTION, on the list day of APRIL Moveless the trees and bare, PUBLIC ‘ hock x tthe heur of Pwelve o'¢ noon, at the Y } 7 . rey * ; tu ie the st 8 COLONIAL BUILDING, in Charlottetown, viz; et unto me the elinces . ; . This burtheu seer ad 1. The Western moiety or half part of Town Lost This burthen seems to bring No 5.in the 3rd Hondred of Town Lota in Char- | * Patience! the earth is waiiiug, ' ywn, and one-fortieth part of Town Lot No Waiting for the Spring.” 68. iv the 2ad Mendred of Town Lots in said Town, ng and in the rear of said halt af Town Lot Strong ash, and siurdy chesnut, iof the sume breadth therewith Thia Plot of : . : vround being sitaate if av alfy and pleasant part of Rough oak and poplar high, the Town, is admirably adapted fur buiiding pur Stretch out their sapless branches I poses Against the wintry sky. 2. The Northern moieties ef Town Lots Nos 43 Even the guilty aspen and 44. in the 3rd Hundred of Tewn Lots in Char sell Ml lottetown, frontiug 40 feet ow Hillsborough Street, | Hath ceased her quivering, and extendieg at right angles westwardily there- | As though she too were waiting, from 164 feet with tie Dwelling Heuse, &e, | w . me E ' aiting for the Spring. thereos, now ocenpied by Mr. Micbae! P. Roeh fort 8 pring 3. Pastare Lot Ne. 413 in Charlottetown Roy- | Batea! ‘ li ’ “ te alt¢, containing 12 acres of Land strain mine ears to listen, 4. Pasture Lots Nos. 138 and 455, in Charlotte If hapiy where I stand ns Roun) nike . ther nere . » . town Rovalty, comprising together 14 acres of But one stray note of music Land. « little more or less hese Lota (aa well as 2s Pastare Lot 413) are partly cleared, aod in au im- | May sound iu all the land. proved state of cultivation. “ Why art thou mute, O biackbird? i . , i rd? On sale of the above properties, the purchasers, Oh thrush, why dost not sing ?’’ ~ I ens e nee ey» Ab! sarely they are waiting, w t lowed eighteen months for payment of : ¢ - ; S the balance in two equai iustalmebts, with tuterest Ww ailing lor the Spring, turuge of te premises. ‘ , , O heart! thy days are darksome; For farther particalars and terme of sale, appli ye © Cargsome ; tf t ¢) ’ cation may be made te the aubscribers. Trustees for O heart! thy nights are drear; Sale, &c., ander Deed dated 7th October, 1504 But soon shall beams of sunshine J. LONGW ORTH, JOSEPH HENSLEY. Proclaim the turning year ‘ Here, boy !—here's another fifty. Just allow me to sit on your box a few minutes till I get the run of the navigation.’ ‘Yes, sir, you can sit there till I get somebody else to strap.’ swooped down, and checked up right in| front of me. There she hung for a minute, | quivering-like, and balancing, just as a fish- | hawk does over his prey; and all the time eyeing me with a jolly twinkle ia her dane-| ing black eyes. * A challenge for a race, sir! if you can !’ Little Dimity lifted her left foot a trifle, bent right knee slightly, meade a graceful curve, the bottom of her skirt just brushing my nose; and off she went like a flying-fish —ze-ee-e-e-st—1it ! — swinging hither and thither, like the folds of a spanker brailed in with the ship-head to wind. ‘So, ho! thatsa challenge, is it? And that’s the way to skate? MThunder!—TJ can skate! azybody can skate!” But [ could, though, whatever anybody else could dv. [ accepted Dimity’s chal- lenge, however, and her practice on ice. So L bounced up from the blacking-box, lifted left foot a little, bent right knee, and stuck coat craft, in yellow trowsers, skirts to her knees, red belt, Russian eap, arms akimbo, | accomplishment of the subjugation of the | South in the next four monthe. | tion uni | gained very considerable territory, but. still there remains a vast region which they have not overrun, and which it will be impossible for them to occupy if the mass of the popula- te and persevere in resistance. ‘There | ing all their efforts to extricate him. aistance of travellers in a railway train blocked up by the snow on the night of the | UNITED STATES. 27th of December, was himeelf buried in the) PRESIDENT LINCOLN’S INAUGURAL. snow, nor could his comrades, notwithstand- | The | : P ated 4 6G] | is one thing quite certain—nothing short of a| place where he fell was quickly covered with | So I sat there studying ice navigation by very great miracle can enable the North to snow, and his dead body was not recovered | dead reckoning, till directly a lictle petti- | fulfil the conditions which Sherman, accord-| until the 29th. To emulate | the expenses of the last fovr years, to raise tants by the upper window. _ Some of the streets of Moux and Lezignan, and it became necessary to rescue the inbabi- It is asserted | The inauguration of President Lincoln, on assuming his second term of office, took place The snow accumulated to on the 4th instant. Chief Justice Chase ad- | ing to the latest telegrams, has fixed for the|the depth of forty and forty-five feet, in| ministered the oath of office. We give be- | of Charleston began nearly three weeks ago. low His Excellency’s inaugural address, which is more remarkable for its brevity the levies of men, and to equalise the loss of | further that several of the town people than for any other feature :— Hlinois and Olio, and so visit upon the North a share of the weasure of desolation which the North has meted out to them."’ The first great battle will be the grand turn- | ing point. } —-——2eex -—— | FURTHER PARTICULARS FROM CHARLETSTON. There is information that the evacuation A rebel officer, who deserted and was exam- ‘ined at Port Royal, gave some of the details, | but they were not then believed. Since that time the rebels have been at work removing ly se ry a+ a Chartoteete wu, lat Maitel’, 1965 flee Seah aed tens il | my arms akimbo. But | didn’t cut a curve e , ay“? elpemenane ee ee | [ did the next best thing, however, and cut | Land Sale. Secbaodeioses” ja ‘spread eagle.” Port foot slid due sou’-| TEXO be soid by Pustte Averton, on or oe ~~ ‘aida as ‘east, and starboard one nor’west, till I acai _ Oath , wens ye if a Es SNOW FLAKES. | realiged those spread out pictorial impossi- at the Colenial Building in Charlott: town, under | ee vee bilities on circus bills. I wondered if my pe na ; tn one og : ‘Mort : gs ‘ d by : | oe of Giactniittiadldians carments shaken boots and skates would ever become ebip- Twenty-Eighth day of May,A. D., 1-60, andinade | Over the woodlands suaaititice ead me shaken, mates again. — betw ecu _ Willian i w alker Moore, formerly of | : se egal Sic ’ | ‘Hullo! mister, you musn’t try to skate aie habe a - hav 7 _ rs uate ye Ci wee 2 re ’ all over both sides of this "ere pond at t, a ne pa Silent, and soft, and slow — duha Mos tannd Themes Morris, th of Char- | Descends the snow. aeaet eal Gee’ Fea eae os a ef Like | chap, as he checked up long enoagh to put | on ng 6 an, al Aa 60 ecnndild: Mariah Phirte : | Even as our cloudy fancies take | In the remonstrance against my ice-mo-| Eig! s, ia the oud foland, bour ded as eljow =. that | Suddenly shape in some divine expression, | nopoly. ast teeseot hasan an ef the Meireof the nce] even Ss the troubled Beart doth make | ‘I say, Mister Saltwater, ¢ a'da't yer} Ge ge Do ral * f : ih ence Son panto thwa dis In ¥ hite qenatinnins confession, lift yerself ami I~hip a bit, sO we ean sail we venty ive chains, ‘theses \ eet diy oriy | The wesbled ake reveuls ‘tween yer legs ?’ piped in a young Scamp | ‘ s, thence East or Eustwardly Fo hains,or ™ ifi'e-leader to a string of twenty juvenile - : eee . _ eee - pe - sa? | This is the poem of ihe air, skaters, Aen of Eel Bathe. conse, wt betes docitinns celta | Slowly in silent syllables recorded ; | ‘Don’t try to skate on both feet at once, | the appurtenances thereunto belong For far.| This is the seeret of despair, | my dear sir!’ advised a sensible Christian- i _ 5 om _— pa gt on — e Long in its cloudy bosom hoarded, looking young man, who came to my assis Dated this 20th day of Febraary, A. D., 1863. | Now W lispered an 1 revealed | tance, and set me on an even keel once more. Saeed o ae : . at pcr wen |* When you lift one fvot. sir, you must throw | ee AR. APES iia el er as actin cial (all your vigor and muscle into the other i ae fg re re " | HIGHJINKS ON SKATES. limb. And then remember to sway your! Valuable & Desirable Building | Bl, Ser OT TN te tee LOTS POR SALE. Everywhere, in all sorts of newspapers, FEU Subscriber offers for sale Two! [ had read of glorious skating fun— Centra! Pleasant!v situated WATER LOT Sin George- . ae toven, with Water Privileae to the chaunal adicra, | Pats skating — Schuylkill, end Schuylkill g the t the ewstern part or the Town | Park—Diamond ditro—private ditto—the = “ey am a nine LA?Sin diftcrent parts of | grand faa—men on skates, boys on skates ; ar: elowl eruns livers _~ ° ae | GEORGE COLES. splendid sylphides in scant skirts, steel-shod / arlottetowr, 6th March, 1865 ‘and skirring away over the ice—-the—the rm or Sere wat _ ~~ ~~ | _Thander! the very reading gave me th ALG MUUURE HOLME, : ice-fever, and in the delirium consequent Cloths, Cloths, Cloths, upon the sudden attack, [ resolved upon taking an ice-cruise myself, Why not? What was to hinder? 1) had never uavigated that sort of a evait, ’tis N Beavers, Whitneys, Meltins, Blue, . Black, Brown sad Drab BROAD-CLOTH, Mautie Cloths, Dueskins, Tweeds, &e.; a very REER & SONS. } } true. But then 1’d been on the water, and under water ail my life — and on ice, too some. Hadn't L killed sea's and chased white bears for weeks together, on ice ? Women cou'd ekate—so the papers said | 39 did everybody else, when [ enquired ot ‘em. I coud skate! What was the rea- sou 1 couldu’t? The only thing I'd ever seen a woman do that IL ecouldn’t was to hook her own dress aft, and, carrying six feet breadth of crinoline, sail through a 'twenty-inch door-way. Yes, sir,—lI could | skate, and L was bound on an ice-cru se. There was nothing to prevent the expedi. | ‘tion from being fitted out at once. I was! lounging about the Navy Yard, detached from.everything—all acquaintances ing!uded superor lot. Shawls and Manties. a ATEST STYLES, cheap. BEER ¢ SONS. ' Ready-Made Cothing. | GOUD = Assortment A large lot of HEAVY OVERCOATS BEER. Fur Caps, Fur Caps. A SPLENDID variety in qualities and prices BEER & SONS. A BONS. } easy, sir — just this way! }my Christian mentor, with a long, striding i stop ? body so that your weight will always be upon that foot which has the ice. Tis very | ! and away went) graceful swing. ‘Oh, yes— that’s very easy. All the! vigor in the other limb. Yes—lI can doit.’ So 1 made a prodigious scoot and—did it, { stuck out lefc leg, like a mosquito wher he’s bleod-sucking. Put all my vigor and muscle into right limb, and couldu’t get it) outagain. Went off on one foot, like ashot ; | crooked rizht knee a little twice a minuie, | just as Little Dimity did. 8. w a crinoline | craft cross'ng my course, ander_.convoy of | a big double-banked chap, both skating al streak. Tried to sheer to pert and go clear} of ’em. Missed stays aad went afoul of) Criboline. The toe of my poor skate hooked | Miss Somebody's skirt, which gave me a broad sheer to starboard, and Ll rammed big conv y, butting him square on his eutwater, and drove the fire-end of my Principe slap! down his thrvat. There was an everlasting tangle, and all hands went sprawling on the } | ice, like a nest of Ineauga land erat. | ‘Look here, sir! What do you mean?! yelled big convoy, scrambling to his feet, ; and marcouvering for a broadside. | ‘ Beg pardon, sir. 1 couldn't help it,’ I replied meekly, still sitting on the ice. ‘Couldn't help it? Why didu’t you, | vinity. life which that period of the past struggle has demanded, is beyond the resources and the! patriotism of the Union. The Army and Navy Gazetie has a leader Catch me 00 Sherman's movements, and remarks that | occasious since the 26th of December, on the Some heavy falls of rain, not exceptional at mountains and in the valieys of the depart- | this time of year in the district, appear to have added to the natural ostacles of marsh, stream, and swainpy brake, and it is net to be wondered at that he has halted. The Army aad Navy Gazetteyreierring to the American peace conference, says that the representatives’ of the rival governments have met only to mark a new phase in the conflict, to make the boundary line between the belligerents broader and deeper, and to render peace impossible till one party or the other have won the fight. — — +r DEATH OF THE DUKE OF NORTHUM-— BERLAND. The Duke of Northumberland died at Alu- wick on Sunday afternoon, of gout. By his death without issue the title and greater portion of the est-tes devolve upon George Perey, second Karl of Beverly, now in his 87th year, and fatherof Lord Lovaine, M. P. rhe late dake,who was born in 1792, and sue- ceeded his brother as fourth duke onthe llth February, 1847, married Lady Eleanor, eld- j est daughter of the Marquis of Westminister, jin 1842. His Grace was admiral R. N ; ; constable of Launceston Castle and President {of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. | He built the Sailor’s Home in Shielde, and, ‘once!’ growled an old comwmercial-looking | within the last few yeais, expended above | dom of Itsly and the independence of the £500,000 in improving his property and the dwellings of his iabourers and poorer tenan‘s During the latter part ef his life, his Grace caused ten new churches to be erected in the neglected mining districts of his estates, rhree new churches were consecrated by the Bishop of Durham in August last, in the pre- | sence of the late duke, who at that time ex- pressed @ wish that he might live to see the whole of the structures finished, so that the | poorest of his neighbours might have an op- | portunity of attending divine worship. Ano- | ther order of the garter is now at the Pre- | micr’s disposal. - - +42>p- —— — DEATH OF CARDINAL WISEMAN. Cardinal Wiseman died at his town resi- dence, in York place Portman-square, on Wednesday morning, at eight @ clock. He had been for some years suffering from a painful and incurable diseas*, but his labors on behalf of his communication were enin- terrupted, except in intervals of great pain, and he bas not withdrawn from active work until very recently, the first sign of his seri- ous iliness being his inability to fulfil a pro- mise of lecturing at the Royal Institution. For some time his eminence had been slowly sinking. According to theaccount given in ‘‘Men of the Time,’’ the deceased Cardinal was by birth a Spaniard and by deseent an Irishman. He was born at Seville in 1802. At an early age he was brought to England, and placed in St Cuthbert’s Catholic Col'ege at Ushaw, near Durham. He was thence removed to the English College at Rome, where he was ordained a priest, and made a doctor of di He was a professor for a time in the Roman University, and was then made r :- tor ef the English Coliege at Ushaw. Dr | Wiseman came to England in 1825, and in the winter of that year delivered a series of lectures. He subsequently returned to Rome, and is understood to have been instrumental in inducing Pope Gregory XVI. fo increase the YViears-Apostolic in England. The num- ber was doubled, and Dr. Wiseman exme back as coadjutor to Dr. Walsh of the mid- land district. He was also appointed presi- dent of St. Mary’s College, Gseott. In 1847 he again repaired to Rome on the affairs of the Catholics, and, no doubt, prepared the way for the subsequent change reselved on in | perished of cold. The Journal de Toulouse published a letter | from thedepartment of the Ariege. It states 'that the snow, which fell on three different Fe.ttow CounTRYMEN :— At this second appearing to take the oath While the inaugural | | Ling waters of a cascade, all ef gorgeous jare to the blaze of precious stones. &c.—In his speech to the Chambers, Louis Napoleon says :— In the centre of Europe the action of France had to be exercised more resolutely. i wish- ed to render possible the solution of a difi- cult problem. The Convention of 15th September, disentangled from passionate in- | | terpretations, consecrates two great prin-| | ciples—the strengthening of the new king i Holy See. Whe provisional and precarious | |state which excited so many alarms is about | to disappear. It is no longer separate mem- 'bers of the Italian country seeking to be junited, by feeble bonds, to a little State | situated at the foot of the Alps; itisa great country, which, elevating itself above local prejudices, scorning thoughtless impul- ses, boldly transports its capital to the heart of the peninsula, and places it in the midst of the Appenines as an impregnable citadel. By that act of patriotism Italy constitutes herself definitely, and at the same time re- eonciles herself with Catholicity. She en- wages to respect the independence of the Holy See, to protect the frontiers of the Roman States, and thas permits us to withdraw our troops. The Pontifical territory, efficacious- ly guaranteed, is placed under the safeguard of a treaty which solemnly binds the two Governments. The Convention is not then an arm of war, but a work of peace and con- ciliation. In Mexico the new throne is becoming consolidated; the country is being pacified, its immense resourees are being developed— the happy effect of the valour of our soldiers, the good sense of the Mexican population, and the intelligence and energy of the Sovereign. In Japan, ourmarine, united to thet of England, Holland, and the United States, has given a new proof of what it can do, —_—_- <> A Paris letter says the Empress, at a late hall, so dazzled the sight by a costume cover- ed with gems that the eye instinctively closed, after a moment’s gaze, a8 it does when the cloudless ray of a summer sunshine is too painful from its brightness. She wore a wide Anne of Bretagne girdle, failing seve- ral mehes over the skirt; a berthe reaching with its pendants to the waist; the throat encircled with a necklace of extraordinary width ; a regal tiara above the head, and amongst the soft auburn curls behind there dropped strands, meant to recall the spark- diamonds, and of emeralds of the finest tone The brightness of the vision fairly startled the guests at the palace, accustomed as they Her Ma- jesty looked so delicate, so fragile, so mortal, under all these resplendent decoratione, the hebitual touch of melancholy which readers | of the Presidential office, there is less occasion for an extended address than there wes at |the first. Then a statement somewhat in mentof the Ariege, has intercepted all com- Sreeih of & Geers Be Pasay arg tgp ae he : S ; ter fitting and proper, Vow at the expiration /munication between the railway stations at) f fot ‘ dari h P Foix and the upper country The conbe-|— on Kuve comatenty h mn Dane eater lquence. t@ that. tram four to Spe Windieal rations have constantly been called forth on hdeaiitinns loged as: sninere, coal heavers, | every point and phase of the great contest or manufacturers of plaster, are reduced to | which still abeorte the attention, aud — . taggin | ses the energies of the nation, little that is | the greatest{distress. The state of the wea-| oy aould be presented. The fi ther, moreover, Causes an apprehension that | 04. arms upon Pict iT elenaiel pars it will be a long time before they can pro-| i. a. wel] Soae oo ae er ie y epen s, | cureemployment. It isin vain that the Board and it is, [ trust.r etl . iol Fhe akin a a have employed a vast number of ‘encouraging to ail Penny SPMenSOry: one ands to clear the high roads leading to the ate : : railway stations. Their zeal and abe inten- | “an oe eee ee eevee 5. arene tions are unable to remedy the evil, and of | taihout Wortas ‘Adel ty thid Tene : SRO er over twelve miles of road whic! separate the) ai) thoughts a Se a aT 86°. railway station from the mines and quarries, | j,, aisle civil war All” dreaded a a there are scarcely three miles cleared. nanan pret le” dan si > deel tan Uw address was being delivered from this place, ENCH EMPEROR ON NATIONAL UNITY, | devoted altogether to saving the Unioa with- out war, insurgent agente were in the city seeking to destroy it without war—seeking to dissolve the Union and divide the effects by negotiation. Both parties deprecated war; but one of them would make war rather than let the nation survive, and the other would accept war rather than let it -rish—and the war came. One-eighth of the whole population were ‘colored slaves—not distributed generally over the Union, but located in the Southern part} of it. These slaves contributed a peculiar /and powerful interest ;—ail knew that this interest was somehow the cause of the war. Yo strenghtben, perpetuate this interest was the object for which the insurgents would rend the Union, by war, while the Government cluimed no right to do more than to restrict the territorial enlarge- ment of it. Neither party expected the magnitude or the duration which it has already attained Neither anticipated that the cause of the conflict might cease even before the conflict itself should cease. Each looked for an easier trigmph, and a result less fundament- al and astounding. Both read the same Bible and pray to the same God, and each invokes Ilis aid against the other. It may seem strange that any man should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the sweat of other men’s faces. But let as judge not that we be not judged. Tbe prayers of both should not be answered —that of neither has been answered fully. The Almighty has His own purposes. ‘* Wve unto the world because of offences, for it must needs be that offence come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh.”’ If we shall suppose that American slavery is one of these offences, which in the Pro- vidence of God must needs come, but which having continued through His appointed time, He now wills to remove, and that He gives to both North and South this terrible war, as the woe due to those by whom the offence came, shall we discern there is any departure from those divine attributes which the believers in the living God always ascribe to Him? Fondly do we hope, ferventiy do we pray, that this mighty scourge of God may speed- ily passaway. Yet if God wills that it con- tinue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s 250 years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and anti! every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by an- other drawn with the sword, as was said 300 years ago, so still it mast be eaid that the judgments of the Lord are true and rigliteous altogether. With malice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive to finish the work we are in; to bind up the and extend bevoee, though all the heavy supplies were eft. The lower part of the city within reach of , our gang was in effect a ruin, and was almost /uninhabited. Comparatively few persons dared to remain there. Some of the houses were knocked down. Bricks and timbers were laying everywhere, and the streets were strewn with the fragments, in many places entirely obstructing travel. Shells were lying among the rain. The appearance of the city, the lower part uninhabitable and the upper t in flames, is described as dreary and desolate in the extreme. According to the description given, the most inhuman and outragecus acts of cruelty were committed by the rebels when they eva- cuated, Viomen and children who had snatched from the Games a few bags of meal or corn, or an apronful of rice, were parsued by the cavalry and cut down with sabres. The rebels were exasperated to the nature of fiends when they approached a man who |Showed the least desire to share the late of the city. Had they been allowed to exercise their own will, not a house would haye been left standing. The firing of the Northeastern Railroad station, together with its contents of rice, meal and flour, was a proof of what they de- signed to do with all she buildings. . The rebels did their work too regardiess ef life or limb. In that railroad station were stored one hundred kegs of powder, which were | purposely ignited while a large crowd of | half-starved people were within gathering up a little quantity of meal to keep soul and body together. A most terrific explosion fol- lowed, the appalling resalt of which was the | killing and mangling of 350 human beings. The tocal quantity of cotton destroyed by fire was about 4.000 biles. It is thought that about 10,000 bales are stili in the city. It is scattered arourd in small lots, some of the owners not having over twe or three bales. In all, eight locomotives and twelve cars were captured. Two o* tho former are in running order. The remaining six will re- quire more or less repairing before they can be of service. A large force of laborers base been put to work on the railroad leading te Wilmington, thus indicating that we are about to do something in that direction. The City Arsenal contains a considerable quantity of ammunitioa. Had our troops been five minutes later in reaching the city, the arsenal would have been fired by a party of rebels who were detailed for the purpose. In the open space oppcsite the citadel are piles of shells suited for the 300-pounder guns which Gen. Hardey bursted on the morning he took his leave. sn inintiiaapliliataadnais Terrisce Errecrs or rus Exrosion oF a Kerosene Lawe.—Mr. Delos Brewer informs us by a letter of a most heart-rending accident which oceurred at North Collms on Monday evening, resulting in the death of Mrs. Uria Clark, and the serious and probably fatal in- jury of three of ber children and a girl aged thirteen. Mrs. Clark and her three children were seated at a table, on which was placed a lighted lamp, which tue girl undertook to fill with kerosene. In attempting this the blaze communicated to the oil in the can, causing the explosion of both the can and the lamp, and instanly enveloping all four persons in a sheet of ‘iquid fire. Efforts were made in vain to extinguish the flames. The unfortunate mother was burned te bleck- ness from head to foot, and her features 80 horribly disigured that her most intimate friends could not recognise her. She survived till Tuesday afternoon. enduring the most intense agony. Cur correspondent says :— ‘To hear the mother’s piteous cries for ber children—-she was the mother of nine; to bear her commend them te the care of Al- mighty God and the guardianship of her friends; to hear her plesd with the physicians nation’s wounds: to care for him who shall ~ ' 1848, which was delayed by the troubles 'which ensued at Rome. The Cardinal's se- | cond visit to Rome led to further preferment. |—waiting orders. Disgusted with bar-| hep Rg a s, detesting theatres, what was [ t wor 5 [ to do} . Oh, ho! green on skates, eh ?’ for amusement? Why, skate, of course! | r ; $9 ve carers moe oF eg: greener’ a cabbage !’ Ladies’ Furs, ITCH, Oppossum, Masquash and Mock | Ermine Boas, Muffs and Cuffs te Match. ; i > The sensation produced in England by this Monkey Muffs. Also Russian Pup and Siberian Ah, yes—the wery thing, by Jove! Why} oa eae ie Ore edition’! Toe F ee es y eo RES & GOMM. | \beda’t' Ef theaght ofthat belere? »'1'd ‘hove That molifiec e big chap, and ng} last appointment, constituting, with the de- ise direct! or sooner: if ib] | me on my pins again, he volunteered to| cision of England into bishepries, the **Papal j ” oie Dhak sooner, ansible. it Newt mu it z thé t ah first ce ar Y | educate me in checking up. | ABEFCRNO RS will be well remembered, and No— va p wee he i sfirst, and started| , Turn your toes up, aud dig the heels of we need nt repeat ae oe of the azita- off up tewn to find ’em. : 12 Ss eaiiiaiaaieiees : ’ “ta a ‘your skates into the ico—this way.’ Aad) "0". © measure taken to resist the ag 1 brought.up in front of a big window on ee Sinan thesi the Gandiiidl the wah ae ak | be illustrated. | gression. ; coe ‘ )> : } er se | the starboard side of Chestnut street, going | ‘ .; 3: | come very prominently before the English ‘towards Schuylkill, where they had maeel f Mees rite do that. A _ I did di- public. In 1859 he made a kind of triamphal eg Tak reg rectly. shot again On one leg, steering | i land, é ej i | different rigs of sliding machines than you | J . a g|tour in Ireland, and he was received with can see national flags at Gibraltar. Know-| this time for the shore — for I'd skated | marked respect in Dublin, Athlone, Ballin- | enough. ; dla jasloe, Dundalk, Carlow, Kilkenny, Water- aho ’ . ’ ng = ae ; ; ing about as much of the qualifications ol | Hallway iv there slid right down in my | ford, and the other towns which he visited. | he different pattervs as a cow does of ehro | , ot course a crowd of forty or so—girls and men, SEAL SKIN COATS. FEW very sererior. A BEB & SONS. Felt Hats, Felt Fiats. =” Ladies’ and Gents’, latest styles. BEER & SONS. | Boots & Shoes. | In Nov. he delivered a lecture on his ** Im- N EN'S and BOY S STRONG B 1x" }nometer time, L went inside, and asked {or | i “gre Bye | pressions of a Tour in Lreland,’’ in Hanover i and Blk WAN S Ladies we aod alpele aeidesiiaes and women and boys. trie Gowan | Square Rooms. As an author, a scholar and Chidrecs Kid cod Co ee SONS * ‘ What kind do you prefer. sir?’ brakes,’ aecording to instructicns, and— a man of letters, Cardinal Wiseman held a SHOES. Fae CS Laer ae : broke too much. Up toes, and digging my | very high rank. [lis lectures on scientific nai Give me ‘Oh, I bave no preference. heels into the ice, L sagged back like and | and artistic subjects were always well receiv-| bave borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphans; to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. MORE TAXES. In the IIouse of Representatives, twenty- _ | seventh, a bill amendatory of the Tariff law, On the recent introduction of the electric) was reported from the Committee of Ways | telegraph in Moroeco, notwithstanding the | and Means, and made the special order for | opposition ef the fanatics, the Emperor of | tye evening session. As reported, it pro- | that country threatened with execution any poses to increase the duties on imported | person who should injure the apparatus. | jiquors fifty cents per gallon of first proof, |The wires having been recently destroyed | ¢, he increased on higher proof; and in lieu | by the inhabitants of Maborany, the village | .¢ present rates, to levy five cents per pound was by his Majesty’s order, surrotnded, and | 4, eotton; on illuminating oils, forty cente the heads of ten of the natives were cut vad per gallon; tobacco steam, fiity cents per and fixed on the telegraph poles as a warn- | pound, ete. ‘ing. This summary punishment is declared | to have produced a great impression on the people. —Galignans. her beauty peculiarly interesting was still a shade deeper than usual, and imagination seemed to hear her whisper of ‘ vanity of vanities and all is vanity’? mingle with the courteous greeting she graciously bestowed upoa the aristocratic throng. idl case. A FROM RICHMOND. Richmond papers of the 25th contain no |news trom Sherman, their continued reti- ‘cence having been requested. One of these ee ‘in the most beseeching manner to bleed her to death, was enough tu move the beart of a ” stone.’’ The girl ef thirteen and a boy “ged six years were not expested to survive. The fourth sufferer, a lad of sixteen, was badiy burned on the right side of his head, shoulder and the whole length e° hie arm, but hopes are entertained ef hie recovery. — Buffalo Express, Feb. 24. —_— nh eee Important From Mexico.—We have been told by the American journals that the U.S. Consul at Matamoras tad been delivered his passports by the officials of Maximilian, on account of the non-recoznition of the French- Austrian authorities in Mexico by the United States. The N. Y. Tines also says it is re- ported that Generals Carvajal and Cortinas are marching on Matamoras, where Mejia, the Imperial General, with 4000 troops, awaits their attack. The New Orleans Times of the 25th ult. says the report of the BUFFALO ROBES. | CF Fiest CLASS QUALITY. BEER & SONS. i SKATES, SKATES, S/SATES, ees GENTS’ and BOYS’, a large | iety and VERY CHEAP. vary PAS BEER & SONS. Stoves, Stoves, Stoves, — FEW of the YICTOBIA COAL COOK A STOVES. acknowledged te be the very best Ser burning Small Coal. Also sume very band éome Parlor Stoves for beth Cual and Wood. Geox Stoves for carn Ee Churehes. Que Leviathe ‘ook Stove fur Wood. Que Leviathan © ees —— SOO PAIRS ida LADIES’ and MISSES GENTS, a fi BOY'S and CHILDREN’S Rubber Boots and Shoes, OF SUPERIOR QUAL! aa SONS ' expulsion of the Consul appears to be con- firmed by his arrival at the Southwest Pass. if this should prove t» be correct informa- tion, Mr. Lincala will save a second war og his hander. the best article you’ve got.’ » Yes, sir ;’ aud the clerk pessed out for inspection a pair of brass-clad_ stee! clippers, j rde iene F » 2et ' a > 04 -by crowded: sedinenen:of i roteetanee as | The announcement in the Trish papers of | journals states that the defeat of the Negro ‘doubled amidship, as if I were going to take | a ' a seat—-and 1 did! 1 went down stern| well a8 Roman Catholics. Among his works | the adoption by Congress of President Lin-|"Arming bill in the Senate does not finally | . - . : ++ Rooay rari a Pe } os , : j : 10 ‘wilutes i : a | foremost, with a whang that broke the ice | aass — ticle rene gonirew P Sivoles coln’s plan of ‘*Eree Emigration to the United dispose of the questicn,@ Liouse bill remain- with ae Oeraree Pot he o (0 like a pane of wiudow-glass shivered by a | of ae a 3 the A ree C1856.) States,’ caused an extraordinary sensation, | ing in that body yet auacted upon. ’ the are 3 . « . m -wW : e i « Ni 4 5e2 5 j Z “le a” 56,) | - : a em than there is to @ ‘ench s Oup-Ol- Wars | obble hurled through it. I had an ideaj.wppe Inf f° Word ‘and a general rush to the newspaper and Sav. NSAH. ‘ These are the best, are they 2 iI ~ The Influence « ords on Thought and ‘orant offices for further information, and ' h ndent of the New . . : - just then that such a Lump as that would | Civilization,” (1856) “The Hidden Gem » | emigrant oMices | : 0 oe | The Savannah correspondent 0 ; e ‘ Yes sir—decidedly : dust get on to) . | ve . ° . * | to the various Consul offices for free tickets. / York Commercial says that while General | ; ast nave elarted the armour of any iron-clad | (a drama written for the jubilee aS Ushaw,|,, . 7 : deaka i cual . c Leen, ott, one yen ko. even nenere and] float 1859.) Points of Contract between Science | It is estimatea that if all the persons 0 Sherman was moving his army out of Savan- eoxwhere, like patent lightning! If you; a ‘ ! yius cat |ard Art,’?(1863,) * Architecture in London,”’ | rous of emigrating from Ireland could be} ,ah. to enter upon his present expedition, ‘dos't find it so, bring ‘em back, sir, and Leolhanans Wifermes Skate, Gaus ao-604, 1864). Cardinal Wiseman was a most a accommodated with mesns to do 80, the| the rebels im the city were guilty of en act ri i r cal ‘ : : . ‘for four dollars, under a strong conviction ‘ a A nollalde Loi an ledihed mat nal country would be com pletely depopulated of of treachery which should bave cunsigned 2 What's the pri +e P ‘that there’s no fun in skating. L's all a/ 4, i : oe preacnet- | its able bodied laboring population in a@sbort) them to the gallows. They cut the sluices at's the price ? | « Fourteen Dollars! nO Nevada, “the baby tscate”’ of the Union, produced last year fifteen millions in silver. That child of Uncle Sain’s was certainly bora with a silver spoon in its mouth. ee The list of killed aod wounded by rail- road accidents since New Year's, already figures up a total of six hundred apd two! Lie was the seventh English cardinal—if he) |. , , }humbug. I ean*t skate—I don’t want to. | g, Bint: Butta | time. in the swamp levees and fluoded the encamp- Very cheap, Sif.” | ccmeaepeeem aca REDSEERTS jean be eae tae ee eet ea ae cot sal ment of Gen. Grover, drowning a number of | Sixty-one deaths, and she rest wounded and Didu't believe that of course ; but invested | ~ Late British and Foreign News. | she a aes diel sit mohandathen The. A new invention in Paris is said to be a the troops. Whe obstructions in Savannah maimed. The accidents last week alone jthe amount, and made sail for Fatrmount. | rcwwrwnserrr mes 3 other six were Pule, Allen, Howard, York (a F®!* of musical boots, ae — etep the | river ronsists of cribs filled with bricks, to | added eight to a total of forty-five during ' Found superb skating. Everybody said | DEFENCES OF CANADA. leon of the Pretender, wio was never in| Pressure of the foot produces melody—it may | ¢)) which it is said many valuable residences the year. ei; ; : ey siete oll = SEs be a waltz, @ mazourka, or an operatic aif. | wore freely contributed by the enthusiastic | \xo—only those that called it elegant! eplen- | The Report of Col. Jervois, the Sepeiy Se | England) y Wield) out tietass This arrawgement would be extremely con-|; \ abitanis. {he correapendent remarks :— | Two hundred and seventy-five persons have did! magnificent There was a regiment |spector of fortifications, on the defences of | Suds pagel Paes a cacntehaatienain: ania 60 eg ne. ws e ee |been run over and killed while walking or lying ve men. & battalion of dimity, aud a whole|Canada, has been submitted to the Gritish| AWEUL SNOW STORM IN THE SOUT ony ene , Lhe garrison of the city i strong. | oon the railroad track ie Maseschesctts, daring of men od ania lL f ee | Sw ital | Parliament. Col.-Jervois is of opinion that | OF FRANCE |# tune would it play when you kicked a yet the inhabitants look daily for W heeler | ih6 jast ten years. ‘The largest number im any brigade of small era’, on skutes—skivering, | if Montreal and Quebec are placed inacondi-| Pye Paris correspondent of the London to make a dash into and recapture the oity. one gear was 33 (in 1502), and the smallest 22 dy : ' f YT are 333 [ believe that a large portion of the imbebi-! (jy j261.) With these facts published from year | Tunes, remarks as follows in reference toan | _— + -—? eo -— )man down stairs ? sevoting aud cutting all sorte ef fancies ou ee P ; | ot : ; | tion of defence, and if the river between Mon ; . ' : P Bs ¢ t the ice; everybody laughing, chattering. | agiense Quebec 8 cmnpaedid by iron-plat- In the Norwegian mines a singular custom | tants—especially the women—-would welcome |{o year, it is extraordinary that people will per. . is observed in paying the weekly wages of ‘him with open arms, aud give bim all the’ sist in the dangerons practise of using the railroad ‘tracks instead ef the higaway, either for walking a4 |whooping, skylarking and skittering in all BEER & SONS. idirections; and L dida’t wonder newspapers, Charlottetown, Dee. 5, 1564. oe ; ‘ | fun. NOTICE. 2 * Have yer skates strapped, sir?’ said an Alt persons indebied to the Subseriber | itinerant boot-black about the height of a , i - —whieh should | . . by Note or Book Accounts—' hi inuestick. have been settled 12 months ago, are 1 EREBY NOTE: | i. z ' derstand it, Bab?’ rizo. Giat wo leval sroceedings W Ube taken | J you uug@erstand if, oud ¢ y March next. "WM. HEARD. Charlottetown, 20th Feb 1865. —— Bauk of P. B. icland. *Ob, yes, sir. | deaten for ‘em.’ | *Ah, ah! Do, eh? time of it! avaiust them BEFORE the Jat da Must have a jolly of Six Pounds per centom, ou the Capital Stock | of the Bauk of P. E. Island, hath been thie day : declared, and will be payable to Stockholders on’ fathoms out On the ice. fter the 20th day of MARCH, instant. — and af WM. CUNDALL, Cashier. | Charlottetown, March 8, 1865. ‘ _[Mareh 13. if tetow flying jib-boom, J nk of P. E. Island. t ‘ : Daten rm : & ‘a frigate’s headyards im a buriicane, "PRE Annual Meeting of the Stockholders | b il adrift of this Bank will be holden at tie bank pre- | the braces all adriit. mises, Queew Square, Charlottetown, on TUES- ° Ob, ho! DAY the 4th day of Aral pomp 9 clock, —eh, bov ? noon, fer the purpose of choosing Seven Directors ¢ ° for the Susatee ror. and transactiny; gach ober | ‘ Lord! yes, sir. business as eall be theu laid before |'-em. 3 oi the ice." N. b —By the ord Bye-Law, all persone voting | by proxy for others, mist deposit there authority to | , : vote with the Cashier at least one duy previously and shipped it for the cruise. to the day of meeting i JAS. ANDERSON, Cushier. Charlottetown, March 7tb, 1365. took a fifty cent ‘ fractional ' fee. and everybody else, called skating glorious | I strap all the ladies’ : : ah Woald like the berth myself. | OTICH is hereby given that a BONUS | There you are. Go ahead, boy !' and I sat | down on Blackie’s b x, about a couple of Whiz! like a rocket, went by a great) ‘strapping, long-legged chap, with a cigar bench, took place on Thursday. The candi- | and swiuging his arms like dates were the O'Donoghue (who had resign-| paging several goods trains which are lite-| with ed his seat for Tipperary in order to stand )2 jy buried in the snow. ‘for Tralee) and Mr. McKenna—the former grarions are likewise blocked up. the towns and villiages 0m the line no carts jars — larger by ' he 26th of ons than that i g the United States. So they can smoke on skates Everybody smokes on Exactly.” So I fired up on a Principe, Urchin announced skates all ataunto, and to any attempt to subjugate the country so ‘long as Great Brita has the command of ‘the eea. Lhe defence of Upper Canada is | more difficult, but even there points are to be found, which, if properly fortified, would off-r 'a most gerious if not decisive resistance to 'an enemy—lor instance, Kingston, Toronta, land Hamilton. Col. Jervois states that the Provincial Government concurs fully sn the whole of bis proposals, and 1s ready te meet ‘the mother evontry in a fair and becoming spirit in carrying out the measure requisite tor the defence of the Colony. tt IRELAND. room of Mr. O'Hagan appointed to the Irish being the nominee for the Lrish National 1 Ireland. The O Donoghue was returned ————r THE AMERICAN WAR. The Army and Navy Gazette, in an article ed vessels, a successful resistance can be ante extraordinary snow storm which occurred in the men. They all present themselves on | 4iq he required. Saturday evening to the inspector, who, hav- ing settled accounts with each, bids bim turn round, and writes in white chalk upon his black back the sum due to him. Thus num- the South of France :— | «The papers published in the South of, | France are filled with fresh details of the disas- }trous ecnsequences which followed the late heavy fall of snow in the departments of the- Aude and the £astern Pyrenece. Nobody re- | turns him round to look at the figures, and | here and at Charleston when it falls. | some will ask. It is not possible to govern a captured city or sleep. ‘so as to win the love of its inhabitants?) 1 do not think that it is.) ; Butler's plan may be a good one, It suc- bered, the man goes to the cashier who also} ceeded at New Orleans, and may gacoesé Mild | League party, while his opyonert represent-| have been able to move since t collects having seen so much snow accumulat- _ pays bim without having a word tu say. ed. | Capendu-Moux and Lezignan, and |twenty feet deep. are guite full. to clear one live as quickly as possible @n the 30th December there were still ‘twelve feet of snow on the railway between the |France. Two very simple preventives against | ‘trenches of Douzens and Conthac, which are | The rail- , road company h-ve- employed €;000 laborers ing a glass of morn . and a giase of water in which an ifinitely —_—— oor | Smallpox is raging in certain districts in infection are stated to have been tried with a very signal success. ‘They consist in drink- ter-water night and morning, “These men are making prodigious efforts to emall proportion (a cendieme) of acide phe- The election of a member for Tralee, in “re-open the communication 80 ineonreniently | interrupted between two towns. ‘ed the newly-iormed National Association of Pecember. The consequences are disastrov by for a multitude of imterests~-for the Bor-| 114 votes, against 80 given for Mr. M’Kenna. ! goaux and Catte Railway Company, as well | as for the merchants who forward goods by it. / | A plate-layer who with other servants of a on the American war, says the North have [the railway company was go:ng to the O8- jy on the 9th, coming out of Grand Cayman. Great difficulty is experienced in disen- | macopeia. Several railway |. Even in ;8 now ‘nique has been dissolved—this latter is one we Oe nearly two thousand millions of dol- two or three hundred mil —_— oe of the latest additiuns to the French phar- | | The policy of withdrawing from the sea- Pe and concentrating the armies for a The eapital invested in Engtish raat teres ' Lee, is looked upon those in militar ocia The Fede. rals will thus expand a portion of their ed. Three of the wounded are 60 cr oceupied cities, ‘while the Southerners are relieved from such | duties, ready for field service whenever re- train. “They will have an opportunity to ‘put cere me etry tri gy A os torces of Meade an erman, or if deem more feasible, carry the war into Kentucky, ity the Washington train then fully due. nvested in the railways of The British schooner Dearbern, at'New York from Sayannah, reports that on the 8th instast, | off Cape Antonio, was boarded by a rebel steam ivateer, of about 300 tons, painted lead color, rigged, with one smoke stack. Also saw measures have failed, and commanders are bated and despised. MOBILE. Beauregard was in Mobile on the 4th, aad In a speech to the | people in the eveuing he expressed confidence that the city would be successfully defended. inspected the defences. ; SOUTHERN PROSPECTS. board, : mov ment, as determined upon by Gen ‘circles as a wise determination. \strength in garrisoning the quired. in Savannah, though Gen. Sherman is beloved and respect-_ jed by a majority, hie men and subordinate | Pattapeupaia, March 7.—The Owl train for New York, on the Trenton Railroad, left about one o'clock this morning, having wait- ed nearly four houre fcr Southern \. It consisted of nine cara, filled with passen- gers. " When near #cbenck’s Stativa, the train came up with a disabled freight train und pushed it onahead, A 2 20 a..m. after reaching Bristol station, the Washinton train run into the Owl tran, demolishing three cars, killing five persons and severely wound- ing twenty-five or thirty others. Ali the killed were soldiers except a fireman and civi- ijiun The smashed u» cars caught fire, but the flames were put out hy the firemen of Bristol. The locomotive of the Washington train was demolished. The track is block- aded, and four trains were detained at 7 o'clock this morning. The ladies of Bristol turned out with refroshments for the wound- ‘that there is no hope of saving their lives.” No passengers were hurt on the Washington | The esca ngers attribute the acci- dent to eae o! the conductor of the ‘Owl train to send the signal man back to no-