..4.\.. .. 'rJ E‘Ah1';l.l.»EM>° tH©'@E’iMd.ll_i,, AME SQMEEE Charlottetown, Prince Edward lsland,lVednesd:ty, April 12. l~:”i4. Establisltetl 18223. W, tlflkl’ V . .*vv';- _,-. It ._11t»/s..,_yl-rfij._«,§,,\{g)__’1,,'_l._.*,, _ ‘B .;,lJI.l.l.El.. New Series. No. I28. Easzard’s Gazette. (Il'<‘.')ll{}I-I T. il \SZ \RD, Proprietor and I’ublialIoI‘- 1-.,|,|‘,.|..tl an-ry Tn_-stlny evrning isml Saturday morning. 0 tit-.e,§ it iei le Quite:-ii Sapttirl, l’. I’. I i; it it s — \mtu.tl Subscription, Ills. in advance. biricount for cash return or ADVlIt‘l’lI|N0. the ‘int i Ilcfllltlb, ocrupviiig the space of 4 . .-.t.l,2s.—6lineii,2a.tl.l.—fl- , 8*. 6 l.—I5 llirsal,-Is —-Kl ‘tea. _ l|||9'i‘5,'-" 3 lliiies, 75:. ti l.-3(i|iiiee,0s.—-.tiitI 2- .lureiirh:ullIt1oIittl li no. 0 is f.iurth ofthe above for em-h oontivnIanrc._ .\ lvi-rtiasiniuttasetitwithoutIiinitattomwillhecontinued Iairlil furlii. n 6: I- 3..- C . LAND ASSESSMENT. 'l're:isuror‘s Otlics, Clurlo tetown, P. t-Z. Island, Juounry I-I, I854. IN pursuance of the Act of the General Assembly of this Islnud, ttuilts and passed in the Eleventh yeirtiftlie reign of Her present Majesty, iiilituled “.11 Jot for lrryiazfurtlter an 2-lsremnent an all Lu :1: in this Colony. out /or the ciirouragwsut of F4‘lt6"llllil)‘l," rind of an Act made in ntrinndinent tliereto, and pnasutl in the ’l‘vvsll'tli year of Her attid Majesty’: Reign, intiluleil An Jet to explain and am:-rt tlis pieunl Act for the Jasssrtnsrit of Land. an-l t'is encenrugsineril of E«ltu.‘nll0I|iIllt..l also of an Act nude and pissed in the l"il'tuatrth year of Her I:|ld .\l:ijesty's lteigu, intilulotl do Act for I eiicanrngsntsrit of Htlltttllloll. amt trrrnlss Fivnrls for um: purpose by imporinrran «Iililiorial Amu- ment on Land in the lllvf Islam! and on Real Eagle in Clmrlollelotcrr and Ceuarnon. and George- torn and Common : I \III hereby give Public Notice that I have made Pftlfllflfllfllltlll,lIcC0l’tIllIg to the terms ofthe snid Acts, of the umlerineiitioned 'l‘owo lafi, Uoiriuion Lots, \Vaiter Lots, I'«'IIl|l|'tl Lots, Islands, and ports Townships in this Island, in arrests for the non- ayuient of the several same data and owtii thereon to Her jlaj-isty. under and by virtue of the tint mentioned Alt, VII . 0 9 4 ‘aortas anclts. Township No. I. do Township Now, 288 " 8, 8948 “ 02, N00 « 3. H12 -- es, woo H 9, W0 " 61, I273; " I I. 3158 " 55. 755 u is, woo -- 51. 4st -- I‘), to " tis. coo -- ts. sass -- so, I900 " 20, 2‘3l)tl§ " 02, I371 " 23, B85 " 65, I326} " 2 I I Gnorge'e Island , 8 " 26, I067} Governor's Island 300 " 26 5261 Salvage Islnnd, I80 " 23, 436! Kildare Island, 250 " St, 7265 Cavendish Sand " 83, 393-“ ll . 383 " , I288 Cttscainpec sand I‘ 88, I063 Island, 500 “ 89. 800 Fish Island, 50 " I0. 085 Bedford Bay Island, so " 4|, 98-t Savage Island 25 " 42. N25 Prim Islands, 86 " 43, M16 l’owiin| Island, 45 H 44, 29l9 Goosel and. I2 “ 46, 850 York River island, 4 " 41, ISI1 Sandy Island 80 lunmore Island, to “ I3. 921 Fire! llundred of Town Lots in Charlotletovvn.—I-2 of No. 41. Second lIuridred,—I-4th of No. 53. l"ourth lIundred,—No. 4o. I-4 ofNo- 80- Pustiire Lots in Cli-rlotterovva |loyalty,—-I-I ef Ne. 12, and I-I of No. 288. Town Lots in Georgetown: No. Range, Letter. No. Range, Letter. 3, O , o , 4 A , to, I B. Is, 4 A. . PI \Vnter Lots in Georgetown.-No. I0. Pasture lots in tieorgetowri llo_vnlly,—No. 85, I86, I33, I83. I-3 M243, mid 290. ' 'l‘own Lots in Priucetown : No. 5, Row 2, Division I, Letter 3. I, do , do 5, do C. 8, do 4, do I, do D. Q, dolo, do I. do J. 4, do 2, do 8. do ll. 3, do I, do 6, do C. 3, do 6. do I. do I2. I (III II I G , 1, n , do . Pasture lots in Princetiiwn ltoynlty—l-4 of No. I5], No. 210, and I-2 of No. 467. And the owners ofthe anid Lots and Tracts ofluind so in uiriiars and proeliiirned iis nforeaaiil, are hereby noIitieil,tliiit in case the sums shiirgarl on them as afore- arii I, htgntllel’ with the costs which ltuvl been incar- rsil. sh tll out he paid hi-,l‘or,e the nest I-luster Turin of the Supreme Court of Judicature, to be held at Char- lottetown, which will eouiiiienoe on 'l‘nesday the day of May neat, application will be rnadelo ilie Ba- preme Court, during tlte eulal 'l‘erui. for Judgment against tlte said Lots and Tracts of Land. respec- vely. ITEPIII-IN RICE. Treasurer. MAILS. lll-‘. .\l.\ll.S lot the nsiglibenrin Provinces, SL1. will be forwtirtled on audit or the 15th Dscernliiir instant via Cups Traverse and Cape Torineritine. They will be made ap on that day. and every ful- Iowtng |"ritl.iy.at I2 o'clock noon, and a mail for England will be inride up every wselt at the same time. and fiirvrnrdrd to llnliftix. 'l‘ll()\lAS 0Wt'.N. Postmaster General. General Post Olfies. Dec. I, I858. Geor etown Malta. 7 ‘IIE Ilaile for than town will, daririgtlte re- iiiuiiidsr of the \VItilOv ‘amt until further notice. '). made up and forwarded every 'I'us~ln and Friday morfilng, at nine o'clock, instead of D ondirya atid Fridays. ' THOMAS OWEN, Postmaster General. General Poet Otlloe. Jan. IO. ION. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AI-Im.-2.0K F‘°"".“_"’ MINlA'l‘UR£Sl LIKBNISSII. III’: as bps has ‘sat received a liiiadaoivie atoekof -‘sit ses,geld and plated Lesli- $.s'stt II he Iulisanssa dose by rep as t. Alsrs Irst rate csasvai hr ssls, irlthliisumlsas la tle all seal... ' _w.caoaas one. ‘I’. IIASZAID. I with rose, upwards or_s:t,ooo,ooo sdrrsiits. up GLIAIIIGO F30! LATE PAPERS. PREPARATIONS I-‘OB. WAR. run size no rowan. or -rm: rt.srr.'r. Tho fleet that sailed from Spithoad on Saturday last, comprises, as will be seen froth the above-given list, ei ht screw line of battle ships, four screw on three paddle- wheel ships ofinlerinr rank, making a total of fifteen war steamers, of which two—the Duke of Wellington and the Royal George —are three-deckers. There is thus not a single ship in the division dependent upon sails alone for pro- pulsion, while there are twelve, including all the liners and the fottr largest frigates, which, being sci-ews, are equally available as steamers or sailing vessels, or as both combined. Ofthe naval force, which for the last few weeks has been mustcring at Spithcad, only three vessels rctnained. 'I‘lie.Neptuno, the Prince Regent, and the Boscnwen stay behind to forth the nucleus of the second division, which is itnrncdiutcly to assemble there, and, under the ting of Admiral Corry, to follow Sir Charles Napier to the nlttc. We shall then have equipped and dcspntch- ed frotn our shores an nrmament such as the world‘ has never seen equalled, and not unworthy ofthtit supremacy which we claim to hold upon tho ocean. Sir Charles Napier will have under his command it fleet of fort -four ships, manned by upwards of Q2, 00 men, mounting about 2201) guns, and propelled by a steam power of more than |6,0l)0 horses. Of the ships, only six will be unaided by that new force which is manifestly destined to effect the same revo- lution in warlike operations as it has already accomplished in those of peace. These are the Neptune, I20; the St. George, l‘.’0; the Prince Regent, 90; the Boscawen, 70; the Monarch, 84; and the Cumberland, 70; noble vessels of the old school, though modern invention teaches us to rely less upon them than we used to do. The division which put to sea on Sutur- day was manned by 8320 men collected without any recouse to the pressgaug, at a moment when the immense demands of the mercantile marine have almost denuded our ports of sailors. With reference to the steam-power ofthe fleet, we have as yet no data for showing how the enormous aggre- gate of 16,000 horses is to be made up, but, as Sir Charles Napier took out on Saturday a propelling power of 5350 horses by screw, and ol"£090 by paddle, or a total of 7370 horses, it follows that,‘ enormous as the force thus despatched is, it, in fact, forms the weaker halfofwhat his command in the Baltic will ultimately include. As to the guns, also, e. similar remark may be made; for while the fleet, when fully constituted, will be able to declare the will of England to the Czar through 2200 orthole.-, and by cannon to which those of he last war were more toys, this first division carried out on armament of not rnoro than 837 guns. This, however, will be augmented to l0l9 guns in the Downs, where the Cressy, of 80, and the Eurynlus of50, wcretojoin the rest ofthe expedition—thns increasing the number of men actually despatched to the north to l0,lfi0, and the horse power to 8l70. It must not be supposed that the fleet which we are thus sending from our shores exhausts all our naval strength, for the reserve ships have not been touched, thirty additional first-class men-of wurcould almost at once he put into commission, and our dockyarde and private estnblishtncnls could enable us to show to the world results at least twice as great as those which the last few months have yielded. Arts ‘run CALll‘0It.\'lA Mtssa FALLING On?—Some discussion has lately arisen in regard to the probable depletion ofthe gold mines of California. The shipments for the last three or four months have shown n decided falling oil‘, which carries with it it certain weight ofrcasoning that there is a diminished production; while on the other hand it is contended that the season has been very unfavourable to the miners, and to this fact is attributable the seeming fal- ling iii? in the amount of old. Six million three hundred and thirty-t resthouarintl dol- lnrs lell San Frnnciacofor thethe Atlantic in the month of Feb. I853, atid in the month of February I854, $'I,99~l,438 left Sim Francisco. In January lsi5::, the ship- ments from San Francisco amounted to $l,0l4,'ll‘t, and during the same month in the present year they were $9,3S;2,'279, showing a falling all’ of 633,438. This, added to the decrease in ‘elirunry, makes the total falling ofl' this year, as compared Alter this comparisonvery little consideration is re uired to satisfy any one that the mines of California are not as productive as they have been in previous years; rind it imme- diately becomes manifestthst they are, toe cdrtein eatent. giving out, at least so far as lndlvidul labour is concerned. ' ,rs_ 8 ‘ —-_Fsn_raIs. ' “Q , . wood. ‘lb per cord; coal I00 pound sack, $3; per ton, delivered, $.10; nt umrltct, bcrt cuts beef, pork and mutton, 37} cents per pound; licst j fresh butter, $1 per pound; second quality do., 65 cents; tioslien butter, 50 cents; fresh eggs, $l.‘25 per doze-n;t|ioston eggs, 75 cents per dozen; tut-keys, $56 to‘ fill) ouch, geese or ducks, $l each; chicltcns, $2.50 to $3 each. There are ut the present little, says a San Francisco pap--r, nearly one hundred lit-st-clatss lire-pi-.iul‘ slot-cs vacant, without a tenant, while dwelling houses are very scarce, and it is diiilc-ilt for a faintly to hire a good house at even two hundred dollars per month, in the suburbs of the city. A CA‘l‘llEDl\AL.—Tl'Ie Antwerp cathedral is one of the largest nnd'mn¢t splendid churches in Northern F.tirr~pe. Its steeple, nmon the loftiest in the world, is of such bettiittful and delicate wot-ktnnuship, that the Emperor Charles V. said it ought to be kept in a case, while from the tninuteness of the curved work Napoleon compared it to Meclilin lace. In the tower is a set of chimes, composed oftiincty-nine bells, and one very large bell which requires sixteen men to ring it. These chimes discourse the swct-test music, day and night. AN Onzt)tr.tv'r SOLDIER.-On, Saturday last, a soldier connected with the Charles- town navy-yard, entered a shop where liquor was vended in thttt city, and walking up to the bar, began to fumble for a four- pence while waiting for the bartender, who was busy in another part of the store. He had inst secured his money when n woman entered the door, and walking up behind him, slapped him on the shoulder, and shouted, “Marcia.” The soldier turn- ed to see who gave this order, and recogni- zing his wife as the giver of the command, without speaking a single word, turned on his heel and marched out of the door as straight as though under martial command. — oalori Ti-ave ler. MAINE Lsw.—There was a majority of I83 against the repeal ofthe Maine Liquor Litw, in the Massachusetts House of Repre- sentutives. Buns IN -rns Ustrsn S1-s'rcs.—-Accor- ding to a statement lately publiaiied by the Secretary of the Treasury, there are in the United States 985 banks, ‘including branches. Their joint capital stock ' $266,721,955, of which $6,638,996 is held by foreigners. Muse or Escars FROM Fins.-—Means of escape from houses on fire have recently been adopted by the police of London. They have stout canvass sheets prepared, which are streched beneath the house on tire, and into which the persons in the build- ing throw themselves, and are caught. Tlio canvass escape has been tried, and has given the greatest satisfaction as to its utility and safety. Persons who could not be persuaded to descend a fire ladder, have leaped into the canvass without liesitation. The Perlhsliire .fldverIi'ssr reports a re- cently discovcred mode of conversing with those afflicted with partial (lt‘.'llllt‘S°, viz: by taking the individual by the. hand, at tho satne time placing the two thumbs toge- ther. By this simple process, the sound is conveyed in n nitirc direct manner to tho enr, and th person spoken to will hear distinctly in a tone of voice several notes lower. It is also important to add, that a chain could be formed upon the same princi- ple, liy a number joinin hands in the manner alluded to, when the individual nflhcted will hear in a moderate key at either end of the chain. Size or Losoo.v.—-London extends over an area of 78,039 acres or l°2'.'. square miles, and the number of its inhabitants, rapidly increasing, was two millions three hundred and sixy-two thtiusnods, two hund- rod and thirty-aix (2,3b"2,‘236\ on the day of the last census. A conception of this vast mass ofpeoplo may be formed by the fact that, lfthe metrt-poli-.i was surroundcrl by it wall, having a north gate, tt south gate, an east grtte, and a west gate, and each ofthe four gates was ofsuflicient width to allow a column of persons to pass out freely four abreast, and n peremptory necessity requir- ed the immediate evacuation llfolllfl city, it could not be accomplished under four-and- twenty hours, by the expiration of which time the head of each ol' the four columns would have advanced a no less distance than seventy-live miles from their respective gates, all the people being in close tile, four deep.-CheaIts'r¢'a Rsatills qftlis Census. A Mons:-an S-rant-sttrr.—'l‘he ways for laying down an immense screw and paddle steamer for the Eastern Steam N a- vigation Company, are in the course of completion It the nrd of Messrs. Scott the extensive ahipbuildera at Mlllivall, Rus- aell, where some hundreds ot‘pile‘a have been driven in order to support theihuge fabric. Many hundreds of tons of iroa_‘for her keel are ready to he put t ether, and the con- tracts have been aig for etioa sad leuaehiig of the ship witbletwe years .lQa—rl .- m of the present time. The fullowin are n ~ few particulars ofherditncnsions:—'l*.xtretne length on Innin deck 700 feet, 4730 longer than the great ldimulayu. steamer ; extreme : length of keel, (ISO feet; extreme breadth J of lictiui, 8‘! feet; depth of hold (forming four dmrksl, 53 feet; length of principal saloon, 6.) feet. Sroni:.~.' Dmru or A\IR. Jcs-rics 'I‘sLrot;tui.—- At Stall‘):-d, on Monday. Mr. Justice Tulford, while in the act of addressing the grand ‘my. was seized with on it ioplcctic lit which a must instantly terminitcd ails life. The attack op- cnrs to have been brou lit on by the excited 'oclings under which his ordsliip was address- ing the gt-nndjury, in reference to the atrocious crimes by which the calendar of the county is stained on the present, even more than on ordi- nary occasions. Ills lordship, in alluding to the state of the calendar, containing a listof upwards of 100 prisoners, many of them charg- e with the most atrocious oflimces short of murder, called the attention ofthe grand jury to tho that that there were no fewer than seven- teen cuties of manslaughter, and thirty cases where persons were charged with the crituc of highway robliory. These crimes, his lordship ohscrvecl, mi lit be traced in a vast number of cziscs to the vice of intempernnce, which was so prevalent in the mining districts: and, while cotnmenliu upon this state of things, his lord- ship feeling, y deplored the want of tt_vru -atliy winch existed between the higher and lower classes, and urged the duty of the superior ranks of society to take it more lively interest in the welfare of those who am bcncutli them. While commenting upon these to ics, his lord- ship became considerably excite and llushed in the face, and accurate observers noticed that his voice hccnmc aomcwliut thick and in:irticu- late. But, one sudden, hislordsliip ll-ll forward with his fncc u on liisliook,und then swayed on one side towzirt s i\lr. Sansom, his senior clerk, and his second son, Mr. Thomas Tulfourtl, his lordship's mursliul, who can lit him in their arms. Mr. Holland and Dr.§{night, two ma- istralos, who were on the bench at the time, im- mediately rushed to his lot-dship's assistance, .-moved his ncckclotb,&c,tind called for water; but it was ofno uvuil. llis breathing wits ster- towns and his fucolivid, and but a feeble action of the pulse could be felt. Mr. Justice Wight- man was hurriedly summoned from the Civil Court, and hastened to thee ot, but only arriv- ed in time to see his bi-otter jud e borne in tnournful recession on the shoul era of six gentlemen ruin the court in which but two or three minutes before his voice had been heard. On urrivin at the judges’ lodgings adjoining the court, it was found that ii ‘e was quite ex- tinct. Both courts were at once I\dj0Ili'Ilt.‘tl till the next day. The Hon. Sir '1‘. Neon '1'.-idfourd, D. C , was the son of E. Tiilfonrd, Esq” ii brewer at Reading, by the daughter of the Rev. Thomas Noon. minister oftin independent congre ation in that town. Deceased was born at Rent ing in 1795, and in 1822 married the dnu liter of John Totvcll Rutt, Esq., oi'Clupbon, Mid lcscx. Iii: “ ‘ ‘ at to "" ‘ ' Grammar School at Mill-hill. and at the ublic riuuuiar school of llraitlinw, received tlic de- grcc 0 D. C. L. from Oxford; become a pupil of Mr. Chittv in 1813 ; commenced prctice its a special ilca or in 1817; was cailicd to the bar ot the lliddle Temple in 1821, and joined the Oxford circuit ; become ti scrjeant: in 1833, and for suvc:'u.l years was Queen's ancient st.-rjennt and recorder of Buubury; appointed a puisnc judge of the common lens in I849, and on that occasion was knights . lie was the author of “ Ion," “ The Athenian Captive,” and “ Glen- coo,” ttragcdicsz) “Vacation Rumbles,” “ Life of Charles L-stub,” “ A S ccch on Copyright," turd various other works, icsides articles in the New Illtmili/y Magazine, Edinburgh Review. &c. He was for many years one of the law reporters of the Times newspaper. lie was returned to Parliament for Reading in 1835, and sat till 1841. I 47 he was again returned, and corititiued to occupy the scat till his elevation to the bench, which took pliioe,es stated above, about lire years ago. . '1 TELEGRAPH FROM NE\Vl'OUNDLAND TO IRELAND. The Washington papers contain an titlicial rlocumerit addressed to the Secretary of the Navy by Lieutenant Maury. uiviiin the results of litr- tle-rp sen soumlings efl'e-.-ted by Lieutenant Barry- mziti. lrtun the shores of Neivloutidlnnd to those ntlrelund. These seem tti be decisive of the qur-stioii as to the practicability of a sob-marine telegraph across the Atlantic ocean. in that region, the distance between the nearest ptiints of the two r-miiitrit-s bring one thousand six hundred miles, auiltlia bottoin oi’ the sea being a plateau the \\ hole distance. singularly Itltspltd tti the purposi- til‘ lioltlirig a line of magnetic telegraph wire. The depth of the plateau is quite regular, gra- tliitilly increasing from the shores of New found- land. where it is fifteen hundred fathoms. tniul it reaches to-o tliouaaritl fatboms when approaching the other side. This is just suited to the purpose, the depth being such as to secure the wires against all the perils of icebergs, anclinra, &c., and res not too deep to be useful. More remark- able than this is the fact, that upon this atlmir..ble plmti-nu, " the writers of the sea appear as quiet and III completely at rest as they are at the bot- turn or‘ a mill ind ;" that " there are on per- ceptible currents and ehradirig agents at work at the bottom of the sea upon this telegraphic plllczu ;” " consequently a telegraphic wire once I-dserl there, there it would rsniiiio, as completely hsytintl the reach of the eoeiderita of drill, as it would if buried in air-tlllil cIue."- Lieutenant Maury sunsets Ihata national prise be ofllrred to the is rapliio company through whose telegraphic wire the flrst telegraphic message shall be passed across the Atlantis. An Barron in ma Eu'r.—-Mr. Geo W. Kendall, the able editor of the .5... Orlcoaa Picayune, i on his way to Europe with the intention locating for a time at Coiistsiitiiiapls, and watching from tlistica eosrsa at‘ ‘war. It is curious to observe the changes that take place in national aliitirs. Not many years have gone by since England and Russia were cooperating together, band in hand, against France, and still more recently Bltrclcu-ood's Magazine seriously argued the policy ofn combination of States, for the , purpose of keeping France in check, as the common disturber of nations. And now, England and France are acting together against Russia, and Louis Napoleon, who has been so frequently denounced as the usnrper, has been for months exerting bim- sell'to the utmost as a mediator between the Czar and the Sultan. Truly circumstances alter cases. Sr. Ntcnm./is I-I01-nr..-—The extensive’ additions to the St. Nicholas Hotel, New York, commenced many months ago, have been completed. That hotel now has a front ofthrce hundred feet on Broadway, and extends through to Mercer street,a depth of two hundred feet or more. t thus has entrances on Broadway, Spring, and Mercer streets, and contains six hundred rooms, including one hundred and titty suites for families. The ag regate length ofthe halls and corridors in t is vast estab- lishment is said to be two miles! and two thousand gas burners are required to light the various departments. The whole num- ber of servants employed is two hundred and seventy-five. The rage for annexation has taken a new direction, a resolution having been offered in the House of Representatives to request the President to enter into negotiations for the purchase of one or more of the Chincha islands. The immediate cause for this is the guano trade, in which, an impression prevails, thergis a mono oly. he desire is to remove that monopoly, and the shortest way is supposed to be to acquire the islands. Verily, it is difficult to tell were we are to stop. This looks like taking hold of South America. Annssr or 1-H; Srr.sxsn.—The I-Ion. J. S. Macdonald was arrested in journeying through some portion of Italy—-having been mistaken for another strangerof the same name, w had become obnoxious tothe authorities. The Speaker was detained several hours, ttntil be furnished proofof his non-identity with the culprit, when, having paid certain extravagant redemption fees to the minions of the Pope, he was re- leased .— Toronto Examiner. PUNISHMENT OF DARING XMPIEIT. Melancthon relates the story of a tragedy that was to be acted, of the death and pits- sion of Christ. But he that personated the Redeemer on the cross, was wounded to death by one that should have thrust his sword into a bladder of blood; and he, by his fall, killed one that acted a woman's part, lamenting under the cross. The brother of him who was first killed, slow the person who stabbed him, for which he was apprehended and executed. So speedily was their daring impiety punished. Reason roa TAKING A Wtrs. —'I‘ho Chinese Emperor gives the following reason for taking a wife:-—“Abeorbed -day and night by the vast occupation Heaven hiig entrusted to me,” says the Emperor in a public document, “ I have need of an assistant actuated by the same spirit as myself." Nin-ion-rou, the lady be pro to raise to this high position, is a la y of honourable extraction, who is highly es- teemed in the palace where her exemplar clmracteris shown the exactness wit which she performs her domestic duties, not even rhriulririg from trashing either fine or course lirica rcitlt her own on She is, therefore, to be in the Im rial costume, and to be at the head of the ladies of the six pavilions. ne watch set many by; but on the other hand, one that ties wrong may be the means of misleading a whole neigbourlrood; and the same may be said of the example we individually set to those around us. Nswsrsr-ans.-—A man eats up a pound of sugar, and the pleasure he has enjoyed is ended; but the information he gets from a news aper is treasured up in the mind, to be use whenever occasion or inclination calls for it. A newspaper is not the wisdom ofa man, or oftwo men; it is the wisdom of the age-of past ages too. A family with- out I newspaper is alwa s halfan age be- hind the times in genera information; be- sides, they never think much, not ind much to think about. And there are the little ones rowin up in ignorance without a taste or res ing. Besides all these evils, there's the wife, who, when her work is done, has to sit down with her bands in her lap. and nothing to amuse her mind frotnbieoih eed eev-as of the domestic circle. Who would be without a newspaper?-Dr. hdttllio. _ Hundreds of barrels ct , -eye. sand in ' ‘n’ u ll C‘ t :.:.:.... W‘ “W