' sth didlos + a PE 4 4 , *” * bachelor, i it ehoald in frirnesa be aadd, an object ? ! : © a married ’ , Hert uu ia ustikes the ae tine Qn 3 passion, - * ie disiikee the nv ite si bettie . sotanh si aetfhnent. bo ve caho ” ‘ Wed o dis ae earnestoees la every. | thing. is tue erewdet the dangler, He is not in tie least eogrometd when he apparentiy parsaes a lady. Lt ae Bia art, hewever, te secu an tt be were dfe has generally a small income, which enettes hin te get en well enough at a club His tailor trasts him conveniently lie aus not a particte of real anbities er desire to Geure in world, Ha ideas are contained id the On Compass, und rey the mereat tela, whieh other men discard with the foppisdness of threeawad iwenty. The dangler, however, never grows old es use He ean ely beeetie- an old bey, and from that silage ad®anee te second childhood Unbke the genuine old boy, he is not theroughh \ ichete—he mw a mawkish and insensate fool even at bie pleasures, for be can ouly bring himeseli te rip them. Ww ot decision is the basia of the cangier’s disposition, It causes hun te dread hiarriage, and te flutter for ever over the secreis he date wot piteh upon. Amongst men he is a nementity. He bes ve part in affairs which de rand shill, ene ay OF perseverence, He shrinks frets Contact with real werk, hke @ sick echoel- eaent m git, His opinions are vacant, and ouly escape from rot being theught idiotic by the number of HHivtic opinions which the same pesos are il. hiewed to bold without question. Phe dangler ts a ivel, in shert, of the worst qveality It we ouly went ia ter relgren, for ecapraring beggara, tor d@avring at theatres, for reteru, er for aisic, ode wight see at leastan energy thrown away: but jangler there is a hepeless and colorless Tn tae hepetence fur whien there te he cy upensaiive eceeutneily. Even with women be is net sne- cesstul, Silly women like bim at first, but dis euver bim after a time; clever women, when they find he has no money, despise him tor bis siupiliy, altheugh they would easily torgive his etupidrty of his banker respeeted him. burtusately, : Gangiers are net over ireq went. There are many young men, and young old mer, whe approacn foo one side er anether the peculiarities of the type, but happily ealy a lew compara vely repre completely. Poe dangler is boch a noodle aed a dufler, and he never kuowe tt. A juke talis ei bis bide as a spent musket-ball would off the hide of a rhineceros He is the laughing -steck of his frieods, and he has no emewies. He ia de- svised too much to be hated; and yet so 2n- trenched ia be in the stronghold of his own con-| eet, that he ie far from being miseradie or} dejveted, He walks about in utter tacensclous of what is theeght or aaid of bim. He would net beliewe tor an instant that be was either barren or good for welling. Sectety is too well bred nowadays ever te give aden totor | mation tc a man te his face, and the dangler therefore never suffers the chance of hearing the trath, When the dangler dies ne one regrets hin Tie is af a class that disgust and turn aside even toe affeetion of a mother, wiieh he is tucapable ef comprehending or reciprocating [t is eruel and prttabie te refleet that such creatures are the result of mederu suctal system, bul every artiheai system, a id, mdeed, every system must havethem. Me. Lewes. inaclever eri icism, teils na that there are begs apparently born ouly le exhibit and demonstrate the growth of caucer- evils. Analegivaily, we may consider tae dangler zs bora ie deanonstvate and exhibit the growth of weral cancers upou the sueial body. [le is nearly as bad as the atreet evil, despite fis neatness and They are partly of foreign extraction, acd France been renewred for her dang ers; but in England their doom is certain were 3f less our secrecy, as ever or sim of ITEMS OF ENGLISH AND IRISH NEWS. | ' It is suid that the Government, just before the outrage at Manchester, had made arrange ments to remit the unenpire d terms of the sen tences passed upon the less guilty of the Fe nian priso vers now in the Bn clish jails, on their giving security that they would at once emi rrate to New Zealand, and never return to} Ireland. Some of the convicts were in com- mumeation with their friends on the subject: but it is not at all likely that this merciful con sideration will be extended to them now that ithe organization of whieh they had been) members has shown that it is still a dawrer to| tre peace of the Kingdom. O'Donovan Rossa, aceording to the Jrishman newspapers 1s still ziving trouble to the authorities at Millbank. | | He has been flogged for insubordination—an | act which is strongly denounced by the Cork | Examiner. It holds that it is hardly credible | he has been subjected to a punishment “ which | society shrinks from inflicting upon the most! brutal class of criminals.” The Irishman also | reaffirms that a Fenian eruiser has visited the | coast of Treland, and by escaping detection | during her sojourn in its waters, demonstrated | the practicability of landing men and arms. A desperate attack was made on the police on Sunday evening in Thomas street—the lo-| cality where most of the Fenian meetings were | held last winter. Some men had been arrest ed for breaking glass, when a mob gathered | and hezan stoning the constables. Four horse policemen who were passi ig went to their us sistance and were likew ise stoned. One of | their horses was knocked down by a blow of a! stone, and in failing broke his les, and altoze ther nine policemen were injured; but they suceeded in taking to the station house their prisoners, who were yesterday fined £1 each. | None of the ruffians who stoned the officers | were, however, taken into custody. The Presbyterians of Belfast entertained the | Lord Mayor of Dublin and the Lady Mayoress | last might at a banquet in the Musie Hall. next hatetul evil of caste, and im ten years it will] —had not ased a razor for some time—the gained by all their blood aud toil and victories.” ink forming a chain with clasped hands in pave UNITED STATES. The resultsof the reeent elections in the United States have gone largely in favor el the Democrat®. perie, communicates the following, undet date | The Washington Beening Express says that “the 5th inst., to the Cape Breton News: Thaddeus Stevens has written a letter since es During the gale of Inet Monday night, | elections, in which he say* that be ehall demand | which was one of the heativet wo have had for | SHIPWREOK AND LOSS OF LIFE. —— the unpeachtnent of the President timediately sometime, and with a heavier sea ti an [| for the filli: ition for the Snider rifle. ever reeoileet seernig, * small vessei called the Naked Truth. of Windsor, struck on the south ride of this Island, where she was dashed to) upon the reassembling of Congress, and the enact- went of a jaw suspending his official fanctons pending the trial, He also advocates: the enfran- ' preees, and, sad ta say, allon boord perished chisement of the blacks in all the States by act of Peete . mie " ack 8 AARON Ti) oy a ies teil nena lof a number of sheds which oveupy an enclosed | space that the amount already paid for foreign wheat | imported in this country is upwards of £7,000,- Mr. John MeLean, Superintendant of Seats! 000 in excess of the total paid up to the cor- Director of Pablie Instruction, Panjaub, and | the responding date of last years A fearful explosion took place on Saturday, at Woolwich Arsenal, in a building set apart) ig and finishing of blank ammuni- | The building is one) by themselves, and the strictest pre-| About noon on Tuesday the réaains of the cautions are used to reduce to a minimum the | . : . . 7 | Congress. In view of the situation the Boston | wreck were diseoyered=ssearch Was immedi- dangers attending so perilous a manufacture. Journal saysi— ately commenced along the shore, but che sea) yy ig appear that in the room in which the being so very high, could not discover any- object of the Deaweratic managers will be to ture | thing of any note ; found a small cask of they recent successes to tte defeat of the negro brandy of 15 to 29 gallons. On the tollow- suffrage atthe South. hat isthe hinge on which) ing day (sea having abated sume) renewed the political future really turne. Let the provi-| the searel, found the body of one of the men sions respecting suffrage laid down in the recon) buried up in a bank with only one boot struction acts prevail permanently, and the Work! noel visibie, dug him out, and rooted up much of reorganization must go steadily on to comple) ot tne peach thinking to find some more, but tion, making equal rights the corner atone ol the | did ent. regenerated Republic, and giving a pew expan: | Yesterday another body was found in the ston and departure to the mission ef eur Hestitur | : : Tics Recent Seed tiens. Gu the other band, if those provisions are) Water among one rocds, : se rst Oody overturned, the rale ef the Seuthern oligavely | would be about 30 to 35 years ot age,—-the will be restored, slavery will be succeeded by the | mide ~ [t needs bat half an eye to see that the grand) He height, sandy hair and red whiskers. | be bard to show what (he patriotic millions have) back of both his wrists marked with Indian the centre, be also had a cruetfix printed on The political sweep in the States is perfeetly woudertul. Oi the 42,000 Radical majority whieh ‘towered so high last year hardiy a vestige remains, There bas been a chance for the Democrats, in the total vote, of at least ten per cent. ‘The most sanguine expectations of the Deuveracy have bene wore tuat real zed. Lady Amberly is visiting New York, and makes & sensation, coming out in lavender sik, innocent of hoops, aud feet * sensibly clad in good stuut caliskin.” DISTRESSING OCCUKKENCE.—We learn from ‘tus left arm. The other body found was ‘thet of a young man ot about 20 years, short sand stoutiy bails. Loam afraid that there was a woman on board also, lor a portion ofa /wovllen petticoat and a piece of a straw bon- inet was found on the shore, None of tie materials of the vessel landed. nor any of ithe crews’ eff -cts—excepting a few pieces o! cloths torn to shreds,” Che Gxaminer. accident took place there were a quantity ef powder pellets ready for insertion in the car- tridyes filled and in process of closing, and a number more cartridzes filled and closed, and | ready for removal to the packing room. There | was scarcely any noise bat what is described as a lomg intense pulf, but which did terrible | havoc. Out of 30 lads in the building, 25 , were burnt, 13 very severely, and 3 have since | died. About 20 ibs. of powder exploded, and the catastrophe was caused by one of the lads, ignorant of the conse. jueace, trying to explode | the cap in the base of one of the cartrid ses. RUNAWAYS, —_— e regret to have to notice the fact’ re appears to be, amongst a certain Clase of j trades- people in this Island, @ mania oe ” | skedaddlinz,” as there was a mania last one of its victims. The report, however, re- quites comfirmation, Major Fuller, R. A., ; Knsign Martyr, Her Majesty's 19th Regiment, whe crossing the stream near Rawul Pindhe were both drovued. Cancurra, Sept, 4.—Accounts from the famine districts are still satisfactory, and the demands upon the Government for relief are decreasmyg. The ex-King of Oude has been allowed six months for the purpose of settling his affairs, aud should he fail to do so within that time a commission is to be appointed to invest rate his debts. Negotiations for the conclusion of atreaty with the King of Barmah are tidvancing satisfactorily. A Cotton Grants Aet for all India will be introduced into the Viceroy's Council next session. The Viceroy has vetoed the Assam Coolie Act. The Bengal Government has appointed a committee to consider Col. Fraser's plans for the erection of lighthouses at the mouth of the Hooghly and All apprehension ‘for house-burning. Three persoug who by the many, supposed to be doing 4 excel, lent business, have lately astonished their friends and confounded their creditors by sud. denly settin out for parts unknown, One wag a country merchant in excellent repute, with apparently large resources,—a second was a manufactarer, driving what seemed to he brisk trade; and the third—whose sudden de. parture has created intense surprise th town—was also a manufacturer of ‘ enterprise, who competed, successfully, it is said, with others in the same trade jn Canada —who had a large manufactoring establish. ment, furnished with all the modern improve. ments, and who enjoyed bimself jn a villa out of town. We do not know to what extent honest people have been fleeced by these runaways ; but we imagine the amount must be very large; and we know that publie on the jetties at Calcutta, of a famine in Upper Burmah have ceased and | the exportation of rice from British Barmah continues. The weather has recently been At Edinburgh a fearful explosion occurred | unfavorable for the indigo, and the rain in on Wednesday, in the shopof a fire work manu- | Jerhoot and Benares has much damaged the facturer, in the Canongatee. While a man | ° * Se > . named Hammond was in the act of preparing! from 94,000 98,000 maunds, I reparations rockets the materials exploded, and .a terrible | *"© making for the punishment of the labbiwes ee tas ee ae lof the Nicobar Islands for their treatment of scene ensued. The shop was situated im one ‘the crews of vessels driven on their coasts. of those large blocks of buildings so common | oe 288 TO THE LIEUT, GOVERNOR OF NOVA SCOTIA. prospects of the crop, which is estimated at in Edinburgh, inhabited by several families,| ADDR os woman jumped from four stories high into the and approached by a common stair. —_— | Tue following address was presented to confidence in the affairs of business meg is desperately shaken by the dishonesty of these people. a This summer a remarkable disease has egy, ried off several prominent residents of Vietorig County, New Brunswick, especially at & place called Little Palls. Only a short time singe, Hon. Francis Rice, a member of the Les} tive Council of that Province, Mr. Vital Hep. bert, M. P. P., and Mr. Emmerson, an influep. (the Banger Whig that, one morning last week, lhe Moderator of the General Assembly pre- | Mrs. Isaiah Rich, of Hampden, Me, left her room, The entertainment was given in re-| im whieh was an infant daughter of ten Weeks word | Sleeping in the bed, avd a litte boy of three years ‘in the reem, cautioning him net te teuch the baby | nor wake her up. Sbe had been gone buta Little | | while whenu she was startled by the sereams of | sided, tarn for the compliment paid by the I Mayor to the General Assembly at the recent meeting of that body in Dabkn, whence they must have carried some most gratifying ideas | of the Mansion House hospitality. The Lord Lieutenant, who went to Belfast} on the lst, to open anew graving dock, met with a most enthusiastic receptiow. The streets were decorated, and triumph-arches were erected along the route. Tae Romay Qvestiox. — Cardinal Anto-| nelli is reported to have expressed his regret | at the arrest of Garibaldi. The Cardinal said | that ifthe Papal frontier had been violated | France would have come to the rescue, but| now Rome was at the mercy of the Italian Go-| vernment. Even if this report is not weil founded, it accurately represents the present position. Itis admitted on all sides that the | September Convention cannot be maintained much longer, and that it must’ be materially moditied in favour of Italy. How little of a prisoner Garibaldi really was may be gathered from the address which he delivered to the soldiers who guarded him to Alessandria. He said: * We shall zo easily to | Rome with men like you; bat want to have a the baby, when, hastening to The room, she found the little boy in the act of getting off of the bed, while the baby had its chest crushed in, its collar boue broken, and otherwise so severely injured | that death ensued in twenty-four hours. Tt is inn: | possible to tell how the injury was done, though | there are many conjectures, one being that baving | by seme means awoke the child and got ber to) crying, be attempted to stop ber eries, with the | result’ stated above. It is a truly distressing | affair, aud bas pluaged tue tamily into the deepest | distress aud grief. Wuata Kesrucky Woman Dip —A corres- pondent of the Louisville Curier, writing frou Litehtield, Grayson, Ky., says:—As this is the season of the year that ginseng is dug, one day last week a woman living fice ailes svuthwest of this place, with hee and basket in hand, weut inte the weeds te dig ginseng, and wade a very profitable day's work of it, She dug and gather- led ten pounds of ginseng, worth $6 oV; caught a Young spotted tawn, which she sold te-day in | Litehtield for S10; canght and killed five young gray texes, for which the State pays her Bo, and | Killed twe black snakes and one rattlesnake. any hunter beat that) Sle took the young fawn street, and was killed on the spot. Mothers | | SONNE Neer Charlottetown, October 28, 1867. threw their children out in the agony of despair, | and altogether five deaths are reported.—A | disastrous fire at Dundee has destroyed two large shipbuilding yards and some vessels on | the stocks, and done damage to the extent of} £50,000, men will be thrown out of work, and their tools LATEST NEWS FROM EUROPE. — ARRIVAL OF THE CHINA AT HALIFAX | What is very sad to hear is that 200) | The R. M. S. China arrived at Halifax on Wednesday The Mails for this Island reached here last, bringing dates to the 12th lust. In the absence of any thing | tle, Midlothian, the two upper stories of the 7 j | more attractive to offer our readers, we devote | on Friday night. south front, with many valuable tapestries, considerable space to extracts from our late | having been destroyed. It has, indeed, been papers, althousb the Atlantic cable has, to/ an unfortunate week for Scotland. General Sir Fenwick Williams by the inhabi- tants of Halifax previous to his retirement from the Government of Nova Scotia. The answer and the address are able and dignified produc- tial resident of the place, died suddenly, ang now the peculiar disease which carried them olf has added Dr. Currier to the number of rig victims.—We observe by a St. John paper are all destroyed. | : ; A great fire has occurred in Dalhousie Cas- | Can) ‘some exteut, anticipated the news to which | they refer. |tifical States by Garibaldi and his band of ‘freebooters has about collapsed. In two |and complete victory over the invaders; and in Rome, whose usurpation was the great object | (of the revolutionists, there was no sympathy |whatever shown for the revolutionary move- It will be seen that the invasion of the Pon- ttinople giving an account of what passed be- actions ihe Pontifical troops effected an eCasyy | TURKEY. THE SULTAN ON THE CRETAN QUESTION, The Monde publishes a letter from Coustan- tions, and are eminently worthy of perusal | that Victoria County bas this year been Visited , ge . ‘ heyond the limits of the Proviuce to whicl| by death with a heavy hand. During the sum. they refer. Farewell uddresses were sent to | mer, a worthy Roman Catholie clergyman, a |General Williams from many other parts of | Mr. MacDonald, was drowned one dark night ‘the Province; and, indeed, the feeling of res | by driving into a river, as it 13 supposed. Later, pect entertained for the gallant Hero seems to | the Sheviif of the County, Mr. Wesley ‘be almost universal, notwithstanding what a/|son, was killed, as it was thought at the time, by falling down a rocky clill, but recent de. velopinents lead to the impression that he wag. murdered. Then came the death by disease of many of its most prominent residents, few rabid auti-Confederates in Halifax may say | tu the contrary :— TO HIS EXCELLENCY SIR WILLIAM FENWICK WILLIAMS, Of Kars, Baronet, Lieutenant General in Ther $< age Majesty's Army, Kaigit Commander of the! MASONIC. Most Uonorable Order of the Bath; Grawd Of- jicer Legion Mhonneur ; \st Class of the Verkish tween the Sultan and the Russian General) and Commander-in-Chicf. in and over Her Mu- jesty’s Province of Nova Scot and us Depex- dencies, Ne, &e. | May it please your Excelleney— | cnatieff, on the subject of Crete. Itsays:—In ‘the audience which the Ambassador of the Czar had with his Ottoman Majesty before | starting on his second journey to the Crimea, : ) | Order of Medijee, &c . Se; Lieutenant Gorernoe We, the undersigned, inhabitants of the City | and County of Halitax, have learned with feelings } At the Regular Communication of Alexandra, toyal Arch Chapter, No. 100, beld at St. John's. | Hall, on Wednesday evening, October 16th,. the following Officers were duly installed by aust Principal &. 5. Carvell :-- M. E. Comp. Adam Murray, Principal , Companion C.U, Hanford, 4 deserve only to be beaten with crosses not with! muskets. We shall have plenty to do. shall have to sweep away all the filth. Tyrol and Rome will come.’ He then told them to} ricketty, mean, aud affected, are uuadle to leve| maintain discipline, and added: “The day) or to hate, to act or to think, j will certainly eome when we shall shew certain - ees : linsolent nei:hbors that we are still the descen- A SECOND GUY FAWK&s LY MUN dants of the Romans, who by force of will and | * discipline were the most powerful and the most | civilized people in the world. I should be} happy tocommand you then. Yes; that would be the proudest day of my life. If my limbs | tail to carry me as fast as you can march I will zo | in a@ wagon.’ At Genoa he told the crowd that ** Rome is ours; we shall soon be there.” | The Paris correspondent of the London) Times describes the small wares at the French | Already there is an inelination to deteet these bepestors aud to preclaun them. [Ct is better even Chat women siould sell Cheuselves for money toan marry fellows of this cenustitution, who, rEVIDEO. { A correspondent in South America sends the foliowing account of an almost trazic affuir to | the Providence (R. 1.) Journal, of Sept. 12.) | On Monday morning, the second July, our sedate city was quite startled from its usual pro- priety, by the discovery of a gunpowder plot, | which for ingenuity and devilish intention, has round with the Pope’s Zouaves, aid these men) home, and she having a young baby, nursed the | no equal in history, excepting only the pro- posed massacre by Guy Fawkes of the English Pactiament. The following is, as far as ascer- It in tuined, a correct account of the affair. seems that some time since a (rerman Moujevideo became very anxious to buy a house thet the goternment buildin, here, ane in which the State councils are heid. dergoing repairs, situated in the rear of or fort, as it is called Succeeding in «ue effecting the desired pur- chase he contiaued the repairs to the house, at- tracting at the time, however, some attention by the rather oat of the way course he pursued it, carefully finishing the floor before he did the roof. The house finished, nothing more was thouzht of the matter anti! the nizht of the Ist 5S 8 duly, when a mason appeared at the Cabildo, and stated that “he had veen offered two hun-| dred dollars to work one nisht in a subterra- neaa passage leading from it to the fort, and he fours ‘that there was something ' fawn and baby from her breast at tue same Line. | hitthe spotted tawn sucking at the same Lime, | A Boston “ovation” seems te be a fearfu, thing. Lhe Bostow papers coutain shocking ac: | counts of the scenes enacted by the street mob | on the reception of Sheridan, One report gives | details of the * shametul and disgusting conduct” | of the roughs, who, we are teld, were ** bere there and everywhere, constituting the chief eles, ment of the crowd.” We are told that a large | auiwber of ladies were crowded down, run over, tred upou and very severely injured, and to show that this is net exaggevated, it is noted that ten) of the wounded were carried into a stable, eight) into Baker's house, three inte another house, | twenty were carried into drag stores, and many | were taken home in carriages. One lady had | ‘obeying the commands of his master. ment. The Government of Louis Napole ito cede Candia to Greece, and thereby avoid to support the Pope’s temporal power, and was | His ithe ; F ae : nole ‘fer j 7 se ny aval | * ° « 4 ° backing this determinativa by sending a naval | Majesty, addressing the Russian Ambassador in gravest complications. Ottoman z arv ti "e Ut e. a al E . . and military force to Rome. Victor Kmmanuel ‘atone of great resoluteness and bitterness, re was required by the French Eaiperor to res- > ’ sail ilies ete. :d | B 2 nes Sovereig acy n con- . . ce pect the Pope’s sovereignity m Italy, i King George, who wants it in order to render Paeentte with treaty stinnlatinns < ~~ a ae . ° formity with treaty stipulations, and the King | himself popular in Greece; he who is not a of Italy (so called), was somewhat reluctantly The | three years. red-shirted fellows are, therefore, compelled to | of a dynasty which owes so much to its people -born Greek, and who has reigned scarcely I am the thirty-third descendant - mment fi i | 2g Ww re. ° ° . ° seek employment for their free lances elsewhere. | 5.4. whom it has reigned for upwards of five Parliament will be summoned to meet on| cemturies, and you estimate my popularity— ithe General reverted to the question of Crete, | one with the view of repeating the friendly advice | We) Lam told it was a novel aight te aee baby and the | had declared most positively. its determination | | plied: —* You advise me to cede Candia to} which claimed you as ove of its uiest distingutraed }sous; and it cannot be but a source of graliSea- i tien to your Exeelleney that the benefits whieh | we coufideutly expected as the result of your ad- (ministration have been abundautly realized by the j | peopie of this Provinee. | During your Excellency’s stay ameng us seu have ever maniiested both by word and deed your | fyerest in every effort to promote the moral and material interests of the country, and nove exer i appealed to your Exeelleney in vain tor assistance ee ee a . Donald McKinnon, @ = J ot deep regret that your Excellency is about Lo oy ly ‘leave the Province iS an early date. > or Meitae Seribe KB, | Your appointment te the high office of Ber i s a ae .: | Majesty’s Representative in this Provinee was cs aS aucun, Lreasurer, felt by all your fellow-countrymen to be not only ~ Starbird, Ist la weil merited recoguition by Her Majesty of ” George Douglass, 2d do | your previous brilliant services, but a warle of * Benj. Rogers, 3d do | Her special interest in this portion of Her Expire “ . Janitor. St. John’s Hall was the scene of a very” pleasant occurrence at the close of a ial. Communication of St. John’s Lodge, on ; day evening. the bt iat., upon the occasion |} mine, at nothing! From the commencement to any cause weich commended itselt to sour ot the presentation of w Bible to the ‘a number of Ladies mterested in its Fhe Ladies assembled at the Hall at Yo’ and, atter an address aceompanying the gift, to iwhieh aa appropriate reply was made Ce Worshipful Master, a fine collation was par. taken of, followed by singing and short ad Exhibition in rather an amusing way: ~“ One) her leg broken, and another waa so severely ine |of the chief characteristics of the article de. jured by being trampled beneath the surging ) Paris is that, whether necessary or unnecessary, crowd that she 18 nut expected to live. it plays upon the fancy and comes to us in strange disguises. It is not enough that you! George Leeming, a blacksmith, at Jeanaville, | should have an ink-bottle on your table; it is| Pa., has tallen beir to an estate in England esti- | above all things necessary that this ink bottle mated at more than a million of dollars, aud bas) should appear to be something else. It is a| *#lled fue that couutry to tnbe quenseene. cannon ball—it is a pound weight—it is al 4) Cheyenne, on the night of the 4th inet.,| nezro’s head—it is a railway ensine. You} jsmes Moore, a well kuown ranchman, and re-| take the nezro hy his black, woolly hair; YOU! puted the richest man on the plans, killed Pat | find that his skull opens on a hinge ; and there Mullaly in a disreputable bouse, and was biuseit is a pot of ink where his brains should be. So} killed by Mullaly’s triend, Joon Hayes. The lat. there is a store of ink in the heart of the cannon | ter is now in the bands of the vigilants, who wali ball, in the nound weight, and in the boiler of) probably hang him. The men were roughs ot theengine. The play of fancy which is allowed | the roughest variety, aud their happy dispatch | in this way is boundiess. has in silver a railway locomotive with tender attached. The locomotive contains whiskey, | the tender hot water; suzar takes the place of vhorse-car accidents in one day jast: week and | coal wr tender, and the stoker is converted makes them out ove killed and eight wounded, | into a silver suzar tongs. If you see a silver) thrue severely. The preceding day one was) | | } ot the town. A New York paper counts up the losses by | Denmark will assist at the celebration. the 19th of November. | The body of the late Sir F. Bruce was buried | ¥ " ee eee rous | subjects who, from all quarters, oTered to or- Wates.—Her Royal ganize themselves in volunteer corps at their Highness has received so much benefit from | owe cost, and to march to the relief of their the waters at Wiesbaden that it has been ; : : and warm addresses from my Massulman in Dunfermline Abbey on the 8th inst. Tne Patncess or brethren in Candia, thought desirable to continue the course. Her! ed only on me to erush the insurrection by | throwing 200,000 Turks into the islaud, and to have long since put anend to the insolent pre- You perceive, it depend- stay, therefore, will probably be somewhat longer than was at first anticipated. . ~ -* . . . . - The marriage of the King of Greece with | tentions of the Hellenes and the intervention of the Grand Duchess Olga Constantinovna is the Powers. This I have abstained from doing the 22 definitely fixed for the 22nd inst. The Im-| out of regard for Christain Europe, and also Mr. Harry Eimanue! | &'¥e8 mtense sutistacuion to the peaceable peuple | perial family of Rassia and the Reyal family of because I could not forget that I am the Sove- | jreign and Father of millions of Christians. The Empress Charlotte is fast approaching | And it is for my prudence, for my moderation a complete recovery, as far, at least, as her|e€%e"s which alone have permitted these troubles mental state is concerned. Her Majesty, it ‘to be prulonzed so far, that Europe would de- r r } |judyment as deserving of suceour; while eur | Educational inatitutions, the Provincial Rifle Ats- jseciation and the Viasledtoer foree—both of which faim al developing the spirit and abiiiiy of the people te defend their country against any agyressor—will always. 1a year muniticent axkto their funds, preserve a lasting evideuce of sour desire to promote the best luterests of your nal re land. your Excellency’s mission te this Province tes been suceesstully accomplished tu the Contedera tion of the Colonies, and satistied that the Union will result in a weasure of prosperity hitherto unknown amongst us, we beg to offer you oar vearty congratulations on the tinal aecemphsi- ment of that great measure during the pertad of your Administration of the Government ef this : Provinee. It is our sincere and earnest prayer that yeur Excellency way be spared many years to witness the progress and prosperity of your wative land under tie powertul inpulse which a Union with i ‘ Believing, as we do, that the great object of dresses for the remainder of the eveuing, Shortly before 12 o'clock, the compariy, to the number of about 75, separated, hizh!y pleased with the eveninz’s entertainment. The Bible- is a massive quarto, elegantiy bound in dark zree morocco, and bears on the outside of the ‘cover the following inseription: * Presented to Saint John’s Lod ze, No. 397, R. EL, by the Wives of the Members, Sept. Tth, A. D, — 9 1867. ~-~__- COLONTAL NEWS. FROM NEWFOUNLDAND. R. M. S. Delta, from Newfoundland, arrived! at Halifax on Saturday morning, 19th inst.. ‘The papers by this arrival conta uo news of” jimportance. The inhabitants of Labrador are- ‘sufering from the Hi success of the fisheries, | provisions were being sent there from Quebee.. (Qn the k2th the Government schooner Volant! arrived at St. John’s from the Labrador, har drum upon a friend's table it is a riddle; and from a match-hox to a mustard pot.” | you must guess what it is. It may be anything | | killed aud oue badiy hurt. r ‘ 44 nepians | seems, is cured of her monomania. Her mem- Secret AND CesioUs Ne&GuCIATIONS OF | | |sire to see me punished hy converting thein li; eciemae me ie . ee ory, however, has become weakened, thouch | into a weapon against me! Ah, General, you our prosperous and enterprizing fellow-country- men onour western berders will give to every | braneh of artand industry: aud above all, that by a cordial acceptance of that great measure, the ling on board RK. J. Pinsent, Esqr., who had. }been commissioned by the Goverument to: discharge the mayisterial duties on the coast. The Court Journal says:—* It is said-thata) Kossura wita Ressia axp Frayxee.—The| certain episodes of the past recur from time to jare not a Sovereign, and you know not what earnest desires of our Sovereign and the Parlia- The steamer Wodf arrived at St. John’s on the _ , wrong Seoteh lady has died aud left young iiecouti | /time to her mind, and then she narrates them suffering it costs a man who wears a erown to ment of Great Britain for our tore intimate and | booh inst. from Greenland. Her crew bad which resulted in the discovery of a tunnel run. | send principal officers of i 5 Garibaldi £40,000. The Pall Mal Gazette says it is rumoured | that the Queen will couter the honor of knight. | hood on some of the leading colonists, in| connection with the visit of the Duke of| Ediuburzh to Australia. State or Iretanp. — The Dublin corres-| pondent of the Times bears witness to the 7 | manner in whieh the [rish landed proprietors | gavernageus | od gentry are attending to their social duties. a great excitement was) While complaints are bitterly made of absen- | tees who take no interest in their tenantry | beyond the punctual exaction of their rents it 18 right that the praiseworthy efforts of others who tegard the obligations which pro-! perty imposes, as well as the privileges which | it confers, ehould not be overiooked. Noim-, partial observer can fail to see that the latter! is the larger class that its numbers are stead- | ily inereasing, and that a more enlightened | and generous spirtt than formerly prewatied | is beginomy to regulate ite dealings with che) people. This is shown in the readiness with | which opportunities are embraced evincing | a kindly sympathy towards them, and a prac- tical desire to improve their moral and mate-| ‘rialeondition, These exertionsare not unap- preciated, though evil influences are sell at, work to cheek the growth of those feelings of | confidence and attachment which persever- | en destroyed, but provabiy many foreign | ®P¢e im well doing mast in the end produce bathe : "© | Many ocessions have recently been noticed in) eT of COUT") whieh the disposition of the landed gentry to | tesy, ve present at sucha time. T brouzghout co-operate with the ranks below them, to ‘ae day every one seemed paralyzed ly the dig. | encourage and stimulate thom by example ‘ 7 and reward, has been happily illustrated. : Tpon this information the chief of, . . ' “ee, accompanied by two other ofiicers, went | 4 ence to the house, and commenced a search, niag from beneath the cellar, to a point (dis-| tant nearly two hundred yards) opposite the | fice of President Flores, where it turved :bruptly and passed under the building. Of course the immediate :esult of such a discovery, which | was heightened by the finding in the tunnel of and a Nu- merous arrests were at once madie, but the ne thousand pounds of guupowder, most perfect electric exploding butierv. wehe onspirator was not caught, and of him and his intentions it was not only ascertained | : i ; that he preposed, when his mine was completed, | to wait until the eiyhteenth of the month, a ‘tional holiday, and theu, when the council the nation were met toretherin the gevernment house, to fire his sin. Had his d sign been wered the sult would have been terrilyle, for not only undis vould Geueral Flores and his officers have | | : | 12 siuisters an 'S who Would, out overy, but as nisht came on a spirit of thanks- r 2 s ; —_ - > -—__— ving and joy for the escape seemed to pre- AUTUMN. A Te Deum was chanted at the oz ‘ ge N ut the beech-nute fallin thedral, the ety became yvenerally ablaze? No sound but the beech-nute f £ Through the green and the yellow leaves, And the rainy West wind calling The ewallow from the eaves. No fading trees are shedding Their golden splendor yet ; Lut a sunset glean is spreading, That seems like a regret. i fireworks. and the streets were enlivened processions aod dele zations of citizens on way to conzratulate the Presideut. we writing the above, it has been ascer- that the plot, iastead of being a politi- ‘tir, was the sole wark of a man named su, an €X army contractor, who intended 3 is And the ertwsen-breasted birdie Sings bis sweet funeral hymn On the oak-tree grim and sturdy, In the twilight gathering dim. Death comes to perap and glory ; They fade—the sunny fours ; And races old in story Pass like the summer flowers - _——-- In Virginia City, Nevada, a poor widow in ¢ execution of his desiga to revenge him- ef ou this Government, for withdra wing from ‘3 patronage. When he was arrested at es Ayres, and President Flores was tele- iphed to, askiag how he should he disposed of, the old General veplied, ** Let him go, I do sot care for him.” AUTUMN Days —Waen autumn sature, bhe a reticed werchant, ef j : a ee wee — — Yo overhauling au vid vest of ber busband s, who bad | ord leisure aud to ostestations labour. The | teeeatly died, fuand a dirty paper in the pocket, | ' 7 earlier aud sets later than when it had ; which on examination proved to be the deed “ the « er ere ‘ ‘ “ . sa hebonintes "Tarts eae cael ae ett te Harace nim. ‘The Wore . aud ne bird-singing,—which is @ purely tue company safurmed her that it was genuiae erie arrangement, designed, on the birds’) aed that $1ISUU in dividends were due on it. She took the mouey, sold the dirty paper for, - . te — peace in the family while the obu dren are bei ieed. and ix \ i j tag raised. and iad aside ae som $14,000 and wenttu ber howe aad friends in the: East | days eeme, * (ee Young @inds are off their hauds. Morning * area iw meen, — hang over streaume “v8 Ow, moist places. The sau plays with them, . fom a te ’ mal oom. ah tow belated! Bleed’s Rheumatic Corwpound and Pain Killer ome et Keep watch, but chiefly the asters, | ia ‘in every sense a famil wdieine, | \wiaieta fringe the fields, etar the sane of the | Ke ite 7 tl h 7 ccna didint ar Meets, aud, like a late-comer at a least, seems : aed aioe wut Byer making up inet tune. At might, an er rs: aoe Kaiy-dids scrape their shrill viols, ms the aur with etridulous music. Over all ibe shrinking Gelda the trees itt up their ger- arves foliage, und, tike dbome whe wait for the | “Magee aud the bridegreen, they shiue wut © Beetles apparel. Beecier's Norwoub. | ee YO ———<— bille. a “A Heese! A Horse! My Kingpost ror a | Horse!” Do you wish t» improve your horse t If se, use Cavairy Condition Powdera—L 8. | Jubueon & Co,, proprietors. fidently assert that Lond »a is far suoerior, both in sige and the number of its inhabitants. But such is not the case. Jeddo, the capital of Japan, is, withwut exception, the {argest and most populous: city in the world It contains the vast number of 1,500,0°@ dwellings, and 5.000,000 of buman sou's. | Many of Ure streets are 19 japaneseries in length, | which is Iu ease of accident or merce of disease, it will save hours of euffering, and in the world, an@ the sea tine and money in looking up awd payiug Doctors’ stantly white with sails “On the Ist of August, 1849, Batthyanyi and | Szemere arrived at Nyiradoni to proceed to) Arad, by order of the government. Kossuth | learnt, probably from Gergey himself, partly from the seeret agents that he had in the camp of the latter, that the general had be san nezociations with the Russians. This explains why he took into his own hands the peace negociations, which he entrusted to the two Ministers (Batthyanyi Szemere). The basis of Kossuth’s nezociations was neither more nor less than the offer ot the Hungarian Crown to Russia. The rapid course of events brought the negociations to an end.” Kemeny, in the} same article published by the Naplo, asserts | that when he met Kossuth, in Switzerland, they | both spoke about the Back administration, and Kossuth told him that Teleky was going to! Zurich, where the dinlomatists were just nego- ciating the peace. The conversation naturally turned upon the Italian war. Kossuth said to! me that the first time he paid a visit to the | Emperor Napoleon, at Villafranca, some one | was already waiting in the ante-room, but that Kossuth had the honor to be received the first. It was only after his interview with Napoleon ITf. that he had learnt who was the person who | hud waited till his reception in the ante-room | —it was the King of Italy. Then Kossuth | went on telling that a senator had been attach. | ed to his person, and that that senator was M. | Pietri. leon had spoken to him of Laussin-Piceolo, and He also told that the Emperor Napo-| asked if they would find there coal enough. Kossuth answered in the affirmative. Kemeny | remembers also that the Emperor Naopoleon | had informed Kossuth of the menacing position | the King of Prussia could sssume as a member | of the German Confederation, if the war ex- tended to the countries belonging to the Con- federation. “T will not deny,’’ continues Kemeur, *‘ that Kossuth did nut ask guarantees for those who would rise in arms, if a coup were to sacceed on the confines of Dalmatia; but Kossuth, in his turn, will not also deny that the Emperor of the French uttered these words: ‘It is net enough that Prussia should think of attacking me, you would also put Russia on my back.’ ”’ 6 Task Larewst City in tux Worup.—A very er- ides is indulged in by many people, in re- lation to the largest city in the world ; many cen- _- iwalent to 22 Euclish miles. The com-. e€do Yar excceds that of any otber ety. along the evast is evu- of ships. Their vessels bread wil Y inevi i sail to the southern portion of the empire, where gee be Specht they are laden with rice, tea, sea coal, tobucce, silk, cotton and tropical iruits, all of wnich ean tind to whic a ready market in the north, and theu return freighted with corn, salt, isinglass, and varivus (other products wuieu bave # warket iu thy south, | raised of such Sa: ‘there stro Naplo of Pesth publishes the followiag:— | fally. bers a portion of his States, how small It would appear that not only was Garibaldi, Soever it may be. The Emperor Alexander . _ ee. : ’ hs za! a1 just] i in the first instance, rot sent back to Caprera | himself, will, I hope, more justly appreciate |the profound and imperious sentiment which under oblizations to remain there, but, it is said, it was promised to him that a vessel commands me to shut my ear to every propo- should shortly be sent to take him to the con-| S!t#on ofa nature to assail the integrity of my Empire. To cede Candia, General—ean you tinent. The vessel not coming, he touk the ' ; te et Tat : ‘ transport service on himself. really mean it? How could T after such an act ‘ . cross the threshold of my palace and encounte Another act of violence, bearing symptoms | | : 4 i mad oe i . |in the streets of my capital the glances of my of a Fenian outrage, has been committed in| | ij le? Y ‘s} ; ‘ : indignant people? ou wish me in making London. Three bandsmen of the Guards, who a Sigh > lst ‘ this cession to sign the dishonour of my crown had been assisting at a concert, were going c ; ; : and of my dynasty? Never!never! Not ouly home throagh Holborn, early in the morning, |” oe y ; : ee i ne shall T not cede Candia, but I shall give my con- when a party of [rishmen, who, it is supposed, : a ae ¢ seut to nothing which, in the most remote de- them tor from their military air, mistook ‘ gree, could tend to such an act. The Emperor detectives, set upon them, and one of the .. | Alexander will, I am sure, comprehend me bandsmen namel McDonnell was shot, it is ; : : ce : when you shall report to him those words, feared fatally. One of the assailants, whose . ee Se which are not only uttered by my lips but also name is Groves, was captured, aud in his posses- ; . eet yas : ‘ : ; sa proceed from my inmost heart.” Sach is the sion was found a new dagger, and in his lodg- ’ i j : a . | account [ have to transmit to you. ings were a number of papers implicating him in Fenianism, and a quantity of builets an? ' : : oe ; ? stantinople says that the Grand Vizier is pre- cartrid ses. coin . . ‘ nails than Mina vs . wring to Set out very shortiy Tor Ur ( ae It is stated, and there is good reason to be- » i . J : ae ~ ” i ‘ag . ., |Sside in person over the establishment of the lieve that the assertion is correct, that inquiries ae : sip : : : ; new administrative organization with which it have been made by Lord Stanley of cardinal | . : : ale is the inteution of the Sultan to endow the for the purpose of ascertaining , a island. Aali Aacha is likewise sai ave whether the Catholic prelates of Ireland would r i 7 : ‘ nS te hare : been directed tu ascertain the wishes and wants accept an endowment of the clergy as a solu- : i ; : : of the Cretans, and he would be assisted by tion of the Tish Chureh question; but at a Cabauli Pacha, Reauf Pact it : : ‘ : . |Cabauh Pacha, Reauf Pacha, and three Greek meeting recently held in Dublin to take this f . ee a la! " € thi is Soe i ; : : netionaries in the labours o itics proposition into consideration, the Irish pre- eg ; ci ce oe pen : inquiry. lates have determined not to accept any part po ta, : ‘ : hl ConsTantTixoPLe, Oct. 2.—The Nor | of the revenues of the Establishment, if they | | : L cay eee , art wi ” | AAnericar gation in this city has obtai were offered. They have also expressed their |) “U°""" “amie” fig x Z anees from the Porte the satisfaction the United opposition to any scheme for separate evflow- : : : ; | States had demanded for certain grievances ment, and to grants for the maintenance of hich had be Lilia ital elie di : whic ac en COMpilaine ’ we r1c% glebes and churches. C , - ; = ; d a nS aga : : onsulate in the island of Crete. Two new iron clads are about to be built for P the British navy; one, the Volaze, will be constructed in the Thames, the other, the In- vincible, will have its birthplace at Pembroke. Thus a private aiff'a public yard are to be em- ployed. The Ygolage is described as a frigate of 2,522 tons{purden, aud 600 horse-power ; the Tnvincib€€ js a larger vessel—her burden will not be léss than 4000 tons, and she is to carry @ casenmyated tower amidships able to fire fore and aft. { INDIA. Bomnay, Sept. 9.—Her Majesty's frigate Octavia has left for the Persian Gulf, in eonse- quence of reported disturbances at Muscat. The new steam transport Euphrates arrived at Bombay on the 27th of August, and leaves for Seuz on the 12th inst., with stores and tents fur the troops on their arrival in Erypt, A collision has taken place between a runaway ‘ locomotive and a passenger train on the Great The latest * reliable reports concerning the | India Peninsular Kilway, resulting in the death corn trade arg, very unsatisfactory. With the prospect of severe winter and ascarcity of man. Two large bridges over an unopened outdoor empfoyment, the price of wheat is | portion of the same railway between Kundwah already so lizh as to almost frighten the | and Hurdah have given way. A crack has poorer clasfes, This week the bakers in heen discovered in the largest viaduct at Thul Liverpool ated Birkenhead have added another Ghaut, and three other viaducts over the same penny to thes cost of the 4 lb. loaf, and if the _ghaut are in such a dangerous state that pas- upward tewidency of the corn market be not s-nzers have to leave the trains and walk across. checked atother advance in the retail price of Seventeen other brid ses over unopened portions For a prospect of the Rajpore extension of the Goeat India check we search in vain in the reports Peninsular Kailway have been condemned by we have alluded; on the contrary, the company’s engineers. The cholera is still cations that rates will be prostrating the armies in Afghanistan. Afzul Khan, the Ameer of Cabul, is reported to be —. Turkey axp Caere.—A letter from Con-| of one passenger, the guard, and a native fire. }cordial connection with themselves, may be ful filled Wherever your lot may be east in fatore, we pray that the Author of all good may bestow bis choice bieselugs upon you, And we remain, Your Exceileney’s, Most obedieut humble servants. Halifax, October, 1867. REPLY: Government Honse, Halifar, Nova Scotia, October 23rd, 1367. THE INHABITANTS OF THE CITy AND County or HALiPax: : Gentlemen,—I reeeive this address with feel- ings of great pleasure, not unmixed with pride, coming, ar it does, from the Metropolitan City and County, in which L have passed two happy, and, I would fain bope, useful years. To I accepted, with alacrity, the mission entrusted rome by the Queen's late Government; and Her Gracious Majesty's present advisers have con- tinued to me an equal measare of confidence, and I firmiy believe that the benefits which yen an. ticipate from my administration wiil be abundant- ly reaized by the patriotic and highly influential company which now stands face to face with me. 1 moreover firmly rely on the daily workings of truth and justice, te elicit on the part of our countrymen, a confession of universal acceptation of, indeed admiration for the blessings of a Unien which lifts us from a state of isolation, painful to all real patriots, and plares usin the proud pesition of the maritime outlet te a great federat- ed country: and, moreover, bids our miners and manufacturers to prepare their beehives of in- dustry for they wants of those vast and now friendly regions, which will for ever threw down the barrier of tieir Custom House, and adit a free passage to our preductiona. If, gentlemen, [have promoted to the otmost of my pewer the moral and material interests of Nova Seotia, T have only done my duty, but I assure you that these duties and ties will neither slumber nor be severed by my absence from your midst, T earnestly respond te pour prayer that T may he spared to witness with you the increased pros- perity of our native land; and that, above all, we may shew our respect for our beloved Sovereign, as well as the Parliament of Great Britain, in whose halls successive administrations have sincerely wished and earnestly desired the achieve- ment ef that boon for which we now rejoice, Let us call to wind that Enyland’s fleeta are our fleets. that her armies are our armies, and agsured- ly these reflections will have a place in our hearte, and guide our future deportment towards the motber evuntries. Gentlemen, in conelusion T devoutly thank you for the prayer you put up fer my fulnre welfare. W. F. WILLIAMS. Gexerat Sir Hastings Dorie was sworn in as Lieut. Governor of Nova Scotia on Friday sor was, that he favoured Confederation. We ever General Williams held, and has equal /ment House. - Lieut. Col. Harding has heen appointed _ Lieut, Governor of New Brunswick, in the place of General Doyle. e* moat constant as well as the wost powerful of last. The great fault found with his predeces- | believe that General Doyle entertains as strong for £15 a month in the torests of South Opinions on the same side of that question as courage to express them. Ifa Governoris to he | assembled on the wharf at the eee vilified for holding views of his own on a great public question, it would be better to have no Tickets to Boston, if they would wuly ads Governor at all, or to have a dummy at Govern- succeeded in capturing four whales. An at tempt is being made to repair the old cable of L856, betweeu Cape Ray and Cape North. Que trial failed, but it as thought auother will prove more successful. A few evenings since a meeting was held at St. John’s on the sulject of Confederation, ia whieh: the people of Newfoundland appear to mani- fest nach interest just now. We observe by” the papers that the discussions were conducted: in @ spirit of candid enquiry, and all who had objections to offer to the proposal of Union were isvited to put them forward for consider ution. The Hon. Mr. White, Mr. Rendell, Mr. Rogerson, Mr. Shea, Mr. Prowse and one: or two others addressed the meeting in support. of Union. Capt. Wooodford offered some ob- servations in dissent on details, while he frankly adwitied the necessity of change. He was- replied to by some of the speakers above named on the points he raised. The best. order prevailed throughout the proceedings, and no desire was anywhere evinced but that of calm examination, and anxiety to arrive at- a just and sound conclusion. The meeting was in all respects one of excellent promise _ | dulifux Express, 21st. ol iiiiineneiniisiinedil NEW BRUNSWICK. His Fxcelleney Colonel Francis Prym Hard- ing, C. B., having been appointed to su is Excellency Major General Charles Hast- ings Doyle, as Lieutenat Governor of New Brunswick, was on Saturday Sthe 19th inst. sworn im as Administrator. | The Hon. S. L. Tilley, C. B., was af days |since united in ory to ae Chip- man, daughter of Z. Chipman, Esqt. Stephen. The happy couple were e cpected t0- leave St. Stephen early in the day fer Bangoty ,en route for Ottawa. On Tuesday evening last the Chief of Police, in St. John, N. B., was notitied by te that a robbery had been committed in broke, in the State of Maine, the safe of mercantile establishment having been blown open, and money to the amount of stolen. Two men were shortly afte arrested in St. John, having been idew the description forwarded by telegraph. gave their names as William Davis and Clarke. They were taken at one of the Hotels, and were armed with revolvers, but. did not make any resistance. $1500 money, and a lot of burglars tools, were in their possession. There was considerable etir in the city this werk among young inen in search of employer and high weges. Groups ef them, attracted the prospect of geting £15 a month at leer ing in South Carolina, might be seen b gee communication with a perset who gue bu as Bancrott, and represeuted himeelt as mat ‘of a Boston Lumbering Company. ‘ober waiting to think that there are bund d of oa ers in the United States. who, if the climate | fit to live in, would gladly work during t Vii several cerdant Islandera entered into with Mr. Bogus Bancrott, and prepared to the Princess of Wales on Tuesday 0 i 325% lot the agent of the enterprising i. whe promised to provide bis dupes wil i fi for the haif the tare, was cap! E 4 new suit of clothes, and pretending 1 be funds, cleared out minus the clothes, his W laborers, It is said that so far o4 2 was concerned, the lumber epecy: We: Edward Island wae not a total ti