RI a, «pesca juncture. Writs returnable on the first day of November prox.; THE EXAMINER. ea a ment of our country a heavy responsibility to the people, should they in party sqitthbles consume their time during the se-sions of the Leg si:ture, to the neglect of the coloniga- tion and opening up for settlement this ¥ ist Country, where, with lavisa profuseness, Providence, with a bountiful hand. had scattered materials on all sides, sufficient to form under a bold and comprehensive policy, and intelligent manage- meut, the comlort, prosperity, wealth and worldly happiness of millions of our fellow creatures. There are some iin- portant canals on the Ottawa completed, and others in course of construction. “That between Lakes des Chats and Chandierre, whan finished, will render the River Ottawa navizable for a distance of 160 miles or thereabouts. The Grenville Canal and the Carillon Canal, are near the Ottawa's junetion wit Le St. Lawrence, avoiding ra ids | ; juu h the ’ & ‘had to record; but the adventure has turned the heads of our near its mouth. The River St. Lawrence, below Montres!, on its right bank, at the town of Sorel, and just above where it widens wnd passes under the name of Lake St. Peter, receives the River Richelieu, which drains 4,800 square miles, and de- sconds from Lake Champlain, having for its source the little Lake George in the State of New York. The length of | the River Richelien is 160 miles. A little below this the River Yamaska empties into Lake St. Peter, 28 miles in length ; and also the River St. Francis, the western branch of which rises in Lake Memphremagog, 27 miles long, and | its eastern branch in Lake St. Francis. On the left bank or north shore further down, at the town of Three Rivers, 90 miles above Quebec, the River St. Lawrence receives the River St. Maurice. which drains a country of 140 miles in length by from 20 to 100 miles in breadth, or of an area | of about 8,500 synare miles, The quantity of timber on this River is incredible; it is as yet almost untouched and said to be inexhaustible. It has itself’ numerous tributaries ; | its eastern branch, Bastonais River, rises away across the country northwardly, nearly meeting Lake St. John apon the Saguenay River, while up its western branch there are | twenty-two or three surprisingly extraordinary little Lakes, | all connected and said to be of immense depth. On the south shore or right bank, 7 miles above Quebec, | the St. Lawyence receives the River Chaudiere, which has its rise in Lake Megantic, and drains a portion of country | 100 miles in length and 30 in breadth, an extent of 3,000 kyuare miles, The River Bastican and the River St. Anne, on the north shore, between the towns of Three Rivers and Quebee, are of considerable size and importance. At the City of Quebec the River St. Lawrence is only! 1,515 yards wide. Just below the city, where it receives the St. Charles River, it widens into a breadth of two miles, and retains that breadth for a distance of four miles further | on, This basin has an average depth of 28 fathoms, and a! tide running 18 feet at neap und 24 feet at spring tides, ' I shall pass hy the beautiful little island below Quebec, ealled Isle de Orleans, 19 miles long and 5 broad, which | divides the river into two parts, and contains.a population of | 5,000 ; and only peep across-at the cataract of Montmoreney, | remarking on its beauty, and barely mention Grosse Isle, as being 24 wiles below the City of Quebec, and as the quarantine station. Lastly, the Saguenay River demands a passing notice. It ritus into the St. Lawrence, 100 miles below Quebee, where | the St. Lawrence has increased aud spread into a formidable | river, with its rapidly ebbing and flowing tides. This noble , stream, the Saguenay, has about 50 rivers of Various | sizes as tributaries, among which the one rising in Lake | Momapene is chief. . Far up its ascent is the Lake St. John. | The Saguenay is navigable for large vessels, for a distance of | {0 miles froni its mouth upwards, and is said to be unfathom- | able in parts. Its banks present a mountainous appearance, | varying from 200 to 2,000 feet in height, rising in many in-| stances perpendicularly from the river's side. Large'saw-| mills are erected on this stream, which passes through an | extensive timber section. Valuable fisheries at its mouth, | where it joins the St. Lawrence, give emp!oyment to a con-| siderable number of persons. Below the Saguenay, rising in | the north, is the River Manicouagan, having for its source a lake of the same name. In turning from a dry to an exciting topic ere I close, I rémark—the elections for the Upper House, the Legislative Couneil, the Canadian Senate, are upon us with all the conse- quent stir, bustle, excitement, clap-trap and bunkum, usually s» current and in such great demand at such an important polling in our electoral divisions on the 15th and 14th next. | As the twelve members now to be elected hold their seats | independently for eight years—double the time of Assembly raen—and as they represent twice the number of constituents, (an Upper House electoral division covering twice the extent of a Lower House constituency), and as the Upper House can- not be dissolved like the Lower House, but each elected member holds his seat till his term of service of eight years hy law ex- pires,—it is a matter of fourfold importance how we ae our vested elective franchise, and that we send to the halls of our Senate good men and true. The present Upper House, as | formerly appointed by the Crown, numbers furty-two—twenty- one for Canada East and twenty-one for Canada West. The good citizens of Dollardom experience just now the greatest furore imaginable in regard to the Presidential elec- tioneering campaign. Fremont’s prospects hrighbten. If journalism is to be taker as an index to public sentiment, his | election is beyond a doubt. The most influential papers in the | Union are enlisted in his canyass—instance New York Herald, | New York Tribane, &c. &e. The proportion of newspapers, | according to an unbiassed estimate before me, is greatly in) Fremont’s favour, and is as follows :— { Papers. Proportion of Readers. Fremont, 188, 500000. Buchanan, 172, 800 000. Fillmore, 95, 95,000. The anarchy and confusion of California—the State of Fre- mont’s adoption—demand that a man of the genius, ability, | untiring perseverence, and comprehensive intellect of its path- | finder. should assume the reins of Government as the chief | magistrate of the Union. The civil war, the blood recklessly | shed in Kansas by a nigger-driving, slave-holding, bratal | aristocracy, and their raflianly sympathizers, demand that | Fremont’s party—that Fremont’s principles—triumph. The | Pacific Railway—that vast undertaking, which would flourish | under his master-spirit, management and direction—requires | that Fremont fill the Presidential chair for the next four years. | ‘The national honour of the confederacy, the respect its porer, its position, should inspire under the statesman-like guidance | of a mind capable of grasping enlarged subjects, demand that the South suecumb to the now intelligent and progressive North | and West. The national safety of the Union from the power | of jealous and mighty rivals, requires that the poliey of Fre- | mont’s opponents be checked ; that fillibusterism and brigandage | be discountenanced. These matters, however, let those most interested determine. | Yours most truly, MONS PAYS. ~ ~~ —-- + Se @ - 2 To rus Eprirorn or tur ExAMrNer. compels me to write, as [ have entered into an agreement for six months to be a short of amanuensis and corresponding Seeretary for a whole settlement, and, between you and me and thé post, 1 am thinking it’s no sineeure I am going to have, far every spalpeen who can turn a rhyme thinks he is i a ready-made poet, and gives his unfortunate family and neighborboed yo rest until he has inflicted from half a dozen} to a dozen verses upon them. The worst of it is. that the thing | appears to bs as infectious as the small pox, for nearly every other house has one of those rustic pects quartered upon its civil list. ‘The songs I lately sent you have had ayery soothing effect upon our friead the Highwayman, who appears to have Deen sung to sleep and quietness as éfiectually as a nursery thyme would silence @ refractory child. Certain it is, he betakes himself to the road less frequently than formerly, and she general report is, that whetever oatmeal he now eats, he * . . . cvines by it fionestly. Our young geniases have, therefore, — omnes ae - _ — i at — thought proper to leave Misther Pat ** all alone in his glory"! | | | T am afraid,Sir, you will begin to look upon me as a very troublesome correspondent, but the fact is, sterm necessity | — a — ——————— for a while, and have begun to direet their satirical shafts at higher game. Only a week ago we had the honor ol a yisif from a shabby genteel sort of person out of Chariottetown, whoeame with a great deal of ab and apocketfull of printed papers, to organize what he called a Branch Political Alliance. He had scarcely announced the objects and principles of this | \-lie-ance when all )is papers were seized and set fire to before his face, and the unfortunate man was carried away | on the shoulders of two athletic young fellows, amid the shouts and jeers of a multitude, whom he had collected ie. his organization, and dropped into a horse-pond close by. He was allowed to pick himself up as he best eould, and is in- debted to the charity of one of our neighbours, who made him a present of an old coat, and allowed him to dry his unmen-| tioables before a roaring wood fire. - It. would be a consoling thing if this was the only accident I song-wrights, and there is a perfect whirlwind of song through- out the whole settlement, which threatens to put a stop toa useful labour for days and nights to come. On the very even- ing following the circumstance above deseribed, there was a gathering of the boys and girls, assembled for alittle innocent flirtation, and a modest, quiet young fellow, who was never | suspected to be anything of a quiz, and certainly never known | to have perpetrated any thing in rhyme before, astonished and conyulsed the whole company by singing the following song, | in a rich and musical yoice. You may depend upon it, that | in a company such as that with which [ had the honour to associate, where the Milesian spirit was so predominant, that the chorus of the new version of ** Shan van Voch,’’ had justice done to it with genuine Irish gusto. Yours sincerely, Oct. 24, 1856. A COVEHEADER. —— THE HOLY ALLIANCE. © did you hear of the Alliance, Says the Shan yan Voch, Where they teach the art or science, Says the Shan van Voch, Of creating discontent Against the Government, Which they hope to.cireumyent, Says the Shan van Voch. And the method they pursue, Says the Shan yan Voch, To carry out this view, Says the Shan van Voch, Is to tell the Tory crowd, In accents fierce and loud, That the land with woe is bowed, Says the Shan van Voch ; When the devil a woe is known, Says the Shan yan Voch, But what they dare not own, Says the Shan van Voeh, For the eratures suffer sore For the offices galore, Which they held so long before, Says the Shan yan Voch. O give them back the chest, Says the Shan van Voch, From which was built the nest, Says the Shan van Voch, Wherein the progeny Of the Compact Fainily Had a mighty purty spree, Says the Shan van Voch. Then all the noise will cease, Says the Shan van Voch, And the land will smile with peace, Says the Shan van Voch ; Every soul will feel quite fonny, And will tlow with milk and honey, When the Tories get the money, Says the Shan yan Voch. Let Mr. H—I—d be Ser., Says the Shan van Voeh, And have toadies at his beck, Says the Shan van Voch ; Give the Treasury to Frank, Where a little private Bank Can be kept for men of rank, Says the Shan van Voch. And as P—m—r knows some law, Says the Shan van Voch, And can wag a learn’d jaw, Says the Shan yan Voch, First Attorney let him be, For he wants the public fee, Though his law ’s not worth a d : Says the Shan van Voch. And as Hi—th, you know, can shine, Says the Shan van Voch, In the constitutional line, Says the Shan van Voch, Ah who can better sport, Either in or out of Court, A fown of silken sort, Says the Shan van Voch. Then reward his zeal and toils, Says the Shan van Voeh, Who else should claim the spoils, Says the Shan van Voch? Give the Excise to Macl—n, Or to Mister B—gs Tr—n, Or M—tg—y the vain, Says the Shan van Voch. Then there’s Printer to the Queen, Says the Shan van Voch, The cause of spite and spleen, Says the Shan van Voch, Some thousand pounds it brings, Then why keep it from J—n I—gs, That most stupid of all things, Says the Shan van Voch. And the Registry of Deeds, Says the Shan van Voch, Will provide some goodly feeds, Says the Shan van Voch, For W—ght or other miu, Who the House cannot get in, In the place of Flinty Glin, Says the Shan van Voch. Then hail to the Alliance, Says the Shan van Voch— Re its attitude defiance, Says the Shan van Voeh— Be its weapons shams and lies, And vile hy pocrisies, For on these its cause relies, Says the Shan van Voch. Sream Exoixes.—Mr. A. Dugdale, of Rue Ponthieu, Paris, has invented some improvements in construction of locomotive engines, applicable in part to marine and stationery engines, | which relate to a novel mode of stopping or retarding the pro- steam is converted from a propelling to a resisting medium. A Frenp tn Ivuman Suare.—An Indian has been arrested at ‘rican intelligence. In this, however, we are disappointed. al : certified to its correctness: gress of locomotive steam engines. In effecting this object, the | eGR AE SEE SO i A te 4! . “ ve ly ¢ Eraniner . tors, Mr. Cundall, a member of their own party, which wo PRARALLELE LLL LL PLL LL commend to our readers as in itself the best and fullest CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E. 1, OCTOBER 27, 1856. refutation of the impression sought to be produced by the — > oe = upprincipled old man of New London :— We had, up to a late hour of publication, reserved consider- | “ Charlottetown, 8th May, 1854 able space in our present No., in the expectation that the} “Sir,—I have to acknowledge your courtesy in furnishing me with ¢ | copy of the account furnished by Mr. John Williains, late Koad Commig. English Mail would have arrived, which is now due, and that gioner,in January last,and of the Auditors’ Certificate appended thereto we should have been able to furnish our readers with something | ~ As Auditors, Mr. Breckea and myself did not consider it within ove : ; 3 | province to examine into the correctness of the charges made in Mr more interesting than the usual melange of Colonial and Ame- | William’s Vouchers, but merely the correspondence of the account with the Vouchers produced, and the computations in the account, The Steamer which left here for Pictou on Thursday only | for any men, horses = carts of his own, but of course I answer only i : a ; from memory, as the Vouchers were left with Mr. Williams came half-way on her return trip on Friday, having been! 5 since bea seen by me. » aod bays obliged to put back, owing to the storm, and the necessity of | “J haye the honor to be, Sir, your a . . 2 . i '. OND, ~ making some repairs; but up to Friday night, when we had | « Hon, Francis Longworth, dc., dc., de” — telegraphic accounts from Pictou, the English mail had not In this communication Mr. Cundall, after acknowledg; arrived, _ | receipt of the amiably and charitably conceived epistle tg From the neighbouring Colonies we have little or no intelli-| which it is a reply, states that the Auditors did their @ gence of great public importance. It is, however, gratifying | and found the Commissioner's Accounts correct—that it was to learn from the sister Provinces of Nova Seotia and New se ee , - ce - ale out the base Brunswick, that their great Railway works are proceeding with | ee sil Prayparr osc pr etl aon of thes aie energy and vigcur—stimulating trade and industry all around taken in connection with their known political sympathies, them, and giving promise of a bright and prosperous future. | that they conceived that the unheard-of course suggested ¢g” The progress towards completion of the Railway in New Bruns- | them, viz: that of having the vouchers vouched for! would, wick—the line especially from Shediae to the Bend, and from have “ oes eu estetliching Th swongly the correct. thence to St. Soles swit be wardlied wht the liveliest interest | eas oe headstone anita Beehteaen 7 a by the people of this Colony, as it will bring us so much nearer by him laid before the Governor and Council—referred } to St. John and the United States—now our principal markets | the latter to the proper parties, the Auditors of the Publ) -—and open up facilities for trade and commerce, the extent Accounts, and having come out of this ordeal unscathed, are now, to shield Mr. Bearney, held up as having been im. properly passed. If Maclean can specify a single comple : item in those accounts, it shall find a place in our columns attractions, to be more generally understood and appreciated | ag we have no desire to shield Mr. Williams or any other and advantages cf which we cannot at present too highly estimate, besides causing our Island, its resourees and natural on the vast continent on whose borders we live, and beyond|man who shall be found to merit exposure. We haye° pursued this course with reference to Bearney, and have fearlessly given the details of his embezzlement of the public | 4) 2s ac f- ac »y have e > - Mi Election continue to reach us from all parts of the American | — r - “i hey perv Toe to gue Knowledge. J bis “ Pas sage : : ~ | were impelled to do by a sense of duty to the public, and Union. U. States journals are almost exclusively occupied in | the Jsfander would do well to follow our example, and dis- discussing the merits and the claims of the rival candidates, | solve its connection with the robbers who bave so long and the supporters of each are so confident of suecess, and the | battened on the pubiie spoils. statements and opinions are so conflicting, that it is difficult to | ae sco vee — . “ vouching for : eae sb cas ‘the vouchers,” is so abs ii e Can only compare t form any iting like an accurate judgment as to whether Buch- lthe nursery tale of the “ House that Jack viailt rh 7 annan or Fremont will occupy the White House for the next | successive additious and repetitions ; fur if it were neces- sary to have vouchers for vouchers, it would be requisite that each voucher should have vouchers for itself—the latter for themselves, and so on ad infinitum. : We are perfectly willing to leave the matter to the dig. J rate it | erimination of an intelligent public, with this one coneludin and let it take its course, so long as they can thereby secure | observation, that the accounts in question were submitted to the countenance and support of the South. We need not say| the usual scrutiny and examination, and that they were that our sympathies, and the sympathies of every free country | found to be correct. This is probably the principal eause - " |of the malevolent attack upon an honest man by way of fear the taint of slavery is too widely spread over the whole ee atid Tr of 2 fel, en eee oe : | to receive as an ally. Union, and the predominance of the South, supported by the — whose borders we are scarcely known. The noise and bustle of preparation for the Presidential four years. The contest isone between slavery and anti-slavery. The Fremont party are for checking and stopping the extension of this degrading institution ; while the Buchannanites, though not avowedly favourable to slavery, are willing to tole in the world, are enlisted in the cause of Fremont; but we _—om 6+ pro-slavery men of the North, is far too great, to elevate the | Tue wretched hack who edits the Islander, bound to earn his miserable pittance by the ubuse of anything and every- The wily and clever Buchannan seems destined for that | thing which ron pave a tendency to place the liberal party position. However, the 4th November will soon be at hand ee the Island C favorable Conraae to the corrupt and dis. i‘ c : F es graced faction from whom he pets his bread, hus poured forth and will set agitation and uncertainty at rest for three or four in the last issue of that paper a string of trash on the eub- years to come. Californian path-finder to the highest office jn the Republic. iject of the Normal School Sviree, which we notice principally : } ; ‘for the purpose of showing the lengths to which the innate Tue Islander of the 17th, anxious to obtain for the Unholy ‘depravity of human nature, matured by long practice in evil Alliance the very appropriate support of a public robber, | courses, will lead a man, when the mind itself’ is fast hastens attempis to conciliate the somewhat notorious Highwayman, | ing into dotage. Time was when Maclean’s pen, employed, Pat Bearney, whose delinquencies we have lately exposed, , though it might be, in a bad cause, evinced the possession of by throwing its patronizing shield over its now very good | some intellect on the part of him who wielded it, but of late friend, Mister Bearney. Well, we know that necessity makes the fact has become apparent. parnfully so, as a tiiend of us acquainted with strange bed-fellows, and we really cannot | his recently admitted to us, that advancing years and the Imagine a more fitting associate to the new organization than demoralizing nature of the business be has so long followed, this, the most lately proven public peculator. He will find | have at length reduced him to a state of mental jmbeeility, among the leaders of the new organization kindred spirits, where nothing of his former self is discernible bat the low the only difference between whom and himself is to be found ; language and ideas of an old and worn cut slanderer, whose in the fact that his superiors robbed by wholesale, while Mr. istrensth has departed — whose character is known — whose Bearney, oe comparatively young beginner, had to limit | censure i approval —and who affords au example, painful his appropriations to mere pilferings. But it appears that, | to contemplate. but of great benefit to the young, that the In waut ot friends, the Highwayman has consented to admit | close of’ an il] speut life isa sort of moral iocteatele directing the despised pick-pocket to the honours of his more criminal them how to shape their courses, so as to avoid the rocks of and daring society, holding out to the neophyte the prospect ‘which the ruin is at once the indication and the monitor. of one day being able to take the road on his own account, The article to which we would eall the attention of our and robbing with the best of the gang. ‘readers in corroboration of the preceding observations, need The old man prudently declines to enter into the merits ! only be read to afford ample proof of the truth ak haan! of Mr. Bearney’s case, and of course, not being able to find | [t is characterized, »s usual with the editorials of the Istander even in his prostituted brains an excuse for his new friend, | by not merely a disregard of truth, but a wilful misrepresen- indulges in a leng rigmarole, intended to create the impres- | tation of facts, and a desire to give pain to individuals, sion, not that Mr. Bearney was guiltless of the crimes we | which none but a hired bravo of the pen would manifest. This attempt to deprive the honorable the Colonial OD OO +0 te imputed to him, and which we expressed our readiness to | prove—not that he had not embezzled the public monies, but | Secretary of the credit to which he is entitled, of being the a Mr. John W illiams had been guilty of malversation in father of our Educational system, and transferring the honor 0 earl aan fpeemerennaner in 1894. _ to the shoulders of Maclean’s friend and patron, Mr. Palmer, e artiele charges the Government with having defrauded will impose on no one who remembers the legislative pro- the Road Commissioners of a portion of their salaries. This ceedings of the day. is false, and the driveller who penned it knows it to be so. We are told that Mr. Coles opposed a measure jutroduced The Government paid those individuals the full amount to by Mr. Palmer, which had for its object the imposition of a which they were entitled for their respective periods of service. | tax of “eight shillings per 100 acres of wilderness land” Maclean quotes the following extract from the Journals of for educational purposes. Well if Mr. Palmer did propose. the Session of 1854, as part of the report of the Committee such a measure, aud if Mr, Coles did oppose it, he did so on Public Accounts for that year :— with the object of making the proprietors pay nine shillings 4 ea appears to your Committee that £655 4s. 103d. have been drawn | and two-pence per acre, and dimiuisaing the amount which y John Williams, late Commissioner of Roads for the Common and Roy- | the tenantry had to pay, On cultivated lands,—Mr. Palmer's alty of Charlottetown, for the service of roads in bis Distri ; $ istrict; that | - ; iw pos in the account rendered by the said John Wiliiams to the encmee idea being 0 eee oe Sonat tee ite Senet nee asses bekaheay thn aforagping cum—is charged against the Govern- | his landlord should bear. We assert, and defy Maclean and ‘ ving been laid out on the pubiic roads, but no vouchers for | his masters to disprove our asserti posed the expenditure of the said £447 7s , have accompanied the said accounts; | - ’ oi : e wo Bill. and t oe ne ‘~ ound and it appears that the said John Williams, on being applied to, has re. Mr. Coles’s Free Education Bil, ane weciue ate en pees to oe to » Spee Committee on the Public Accounts, any | 0D the Journals, recorded against its ming law and We “hers for the said sum. Your Committee consider such conduct, on | i z Pid ‘ Af i the part of @ public officer, a gross dereliction of duty, and such as to | = on Se — rpm 5 aeare: oe poo e render him unfit to hold any office under the Government.” the Committee, appointee a epee ave Sed my Now thie-iepunes deel ‘establishing of a free system of Education, he supported an } s r r sé, merely goes to i per se, yg show that no amendment, no doubt drawn up by himself, but proposed by vouchers for the sum of £447 7s. h: i Committee. Well. it hz a rc had been laid before the | his ready tool, Mr, Montgomery, the purport of which was vanl: that? > ty dappens that it was not necessary nor |19 raise the then masters’ salary from £15 and £20 to £25 usual that they should be. But those youchers had been ~~ y ; =V to duly submitted to the inspection of the proper authorities, as_ and £30, to be paid out of the general -novenme,. previets is evidenved by the following letter from Mr. Williams “|e aaa ene eet an eae ae the then Chairman of the Committee on Public Accounts :— at. land for any of the measures they might deem suit- able to their circumstances. This amendment would make it “Charlottetown, April 1, 1854. | compulsory on each district to raise £25 or £30 before it “‘ Sir,—I ; ’ : t : is ulumaie. “oaadye yous note of this day’s date, as Chairman of the could claim the Government allowance. This famous yan @nteibet ade Scathirlil 40 Sey: bone Ree Siehmuals dace ao ‘scheme, if adopted, would have closed nearly half the schools : ers |. : orn apres of the Public Money, in the 12th Road Dis- |!" the Island, amounting then to about 90, but now under een s County, including Charlottetown Common and Royalty,” | the beneficial operation of Mr. Coles’s plan, reaching to 200. I beg respectfully to refer - " . you to a full and . a : ceipts and Disbursements for Sietdinds headd, fetidicd by sets a | Mr. Palmer’s motive in introducing his amendment, was Hon. James Warburton, late Koad Correspondent which re iq not a desire to advance the moral and intellectual traiuin before the Governor in C i ’ sure was laid | : . | Aabtecbe: Wine merch. vuncil, and by them submitted to the Public of the youth of the country, by increasing the educational to its eae {zanuned and compared it with the Vouchers, | facilities of the Island, but to divert from the proprietors the tax which Mr. Coles sought to impose upon them. Such, in a few words, is the true statement of that part of the article we are now noticing, which refers to Mr. alain. ; since which I have paid no attention to the “I am, Sir, your obedient humble servant, . : [signed] “Joun WILLIAMS. *‘Allan Fraser, Esq , Chairman of the Committee on Public Accounts.” Paducah, Kentucky, who recently outraged and then bratally murdered a little girl only eleven years of age. He confesses | that he has murdered three women, whose bodies have been found, with the head severed from their body, all residents of the same vicinity. He also confesses to belo j y. als belong murderers and robbers, whieh j pin ane robbers, which is composed of Indians, negroes and white men, and numbering thirty-three. Great excitement exists in the community, and an armed force is organizing in ‘the community. a ee Coles’s agency in introducing and perfecting our system Notwithstanding the full and explicit statement of the facts Education, the celebration of the completion of which by 8 Fe ime. sare letter, the Tory Government of the day —|assemblage of ladies and gentlemen, of parents and those determined, if possible, to involve Mr, Williams in a cloud ‘having a direct interest in the improvement of the rising of suspicion, when they could not prove any wrongful act generation, has induced tho effete seribbler, Maclean, against him, on which to deprive him of his office—had the|abuse those who assisted at the recent Soiree. This was buseness to tamper with the | Auditors of Public Accounts, | done for the gratification of his paymasters, who, baving but in hopes of eliciting something which might justify in the | little brains themselves, are only slightly conscivus ot the eyes of the public their predetermined injustice ; and the mogt! necessity of cultivating the modicum nature may | bare they could get was the following letter from one of the Audie « ‘*: I have no recollection of any charge being made by Mr. Williams * a ee ee eee me eee a = a