mie ate nl se ei es is ee, A OE A LES, sili MAE iiial ite, alte itil, Ritiec ci i ot. ans SN oa a lh det. ii. ma iT, \ WEEKLY JOU “"Tie is VOL. XVI. I NEW GO0oDs. i; * Prioress trom Months vals, Disccsunting Again! DEPOSIT YOUR MONEY recent art the Subseriber leus t ce the urrival of Further w ay ’ r Ta . Mail and Stage business offer fer Sale ut DELANY & BYRNE Supply of New Goods, | Lats set sion, oegcete ce re sultnble fur the oremn. in SILER. DRESS "ernon River, on aes the Mh instant f 1 og ’ é ie ie t Poelock Wecrse ; i eee ht eh GOODE, FOUWE MIGROME, WATS [Oo ee en oases Vi oa i ge lah ae ek a cde CAPS. &e. &e Ss Very =n or [ f . th, de Ter ove entire STOCK of Aceo, 10 Bales Canvass from No tto8, 10 Picees 1D ae WAGON " > - " Duck suitable tor Beat Sails, Sail Twine. Bolt i Ninwle do : Y Kope, Pitch, Tur. Oakam, Clinch Rings, &e. &¢ 9 Larue SLEIGHS, D i G GO Ds, Rooting Felt aud Pitch be “te haw Abi Sat cd HARNESS SZ ib . HARDWARE, Charlottetown, Sept 24th, 1868. Ya —ALSO— " 1 REAPING and MOWING MACTIINE, HATS AND CA PS. < A . = : >. , ia .? Ir m Axles, bearly new ; RIT. iN / ’ i XN RANKIN takes this opportunity © Covered BUGGIES, BU rs AND SHOES, - e of AN KL his grateful or for t ‘ i HORSE Power, . veew liberal patronnwe extended to him since he 1} English STRAW CUTTER, Sicleion Sk ints, commenced biteine ia - 1 American do de i oon oad 1 Engtish Patent OAT CRUSHER, te Etc. Ete. AUCTIONEER » PLOUGIIS Ata Discant of Twenty per Cent, » taut a oe ee HABRKOWS, Commission Werchant. 1 iteree RAKE, ( FUR CASH ONLY! il has aleo the greut pleasure of informing his Mil COWS , a Sie wv “ uty “ of ¢ a For io vende ned the public , at he has rented that ©” TRIFERS in Calf every superior, v ' hw h of Goods for lis, commeodions and tire-proof BRICK BUILDING Larve lot of SHINGLES, We will give by ef G is fos Sis n WATER STREET, (owned by Messrs Peake 2 Sets of Sinvle HARNESS; a < ‘ Pres m. APJ Irethers & Co...) whieh will tend greatly to facile} anda large quantity of other valuable articles. Thin ie a tate bis bust ess, having a larwe SALES ROOM, ror Sale Positive y vse WhO DU Ve i extensive and SAFE STORAGE for ail des -_- _ OBIT VE meuey lv luves bl aagre eriptivns of MERCHANDIZE, und trasts by The superiority of this Stoek and Implements is itfention to merit a coutiunatiou of forme DELANY & BYKNE, |" conlidence amd favours, TT - September 17. 1866 1 JOUN ADAMS, Uir i eptember m , ‘ @ EN STREST ' a GEORGE ADAMS. Oppexite Ha. Daniel Brenan’s s = Verson River, Oct. Sth, 1806 ‘ . at 6 18 ~ ‘4 oa All Chitown papers. lin.) ‘“ = aA Osi ; SE! | . a SEWING MACHINES LONDON HOUSE! - : WING MACHINES. 7° ~ f= 13ERT YOUNG has much pleasure Esinblisied 1820. ) 4 fz ‘RT YOUNG has mueh pleasu ha pend in announecine that he has just been appointed 1866 SPRINGGOODS! 1806 = = Sm |i arr ee ie ~+ - ‘ an —_ - rre NU) Ey) av a a an, THE WEED SEWING MACHINES, i tit& Sabeeribers tive now completed > <j ey their Tuspert ta oe fotthe S nt ‘ ~ o ea a und would strongly recommend to all mtending el ‘ a&ljiete fotthe Sease wer? re j is s : ’ ae purchasers, an iuspection of the satple now on adice, LC Owen, |! ie. Latte, Edwm & ag vil S as his Premises, se coutid ut te he that’ ‘thes ouly dczue, Arsadue, aud brtut. Helen Dacws. = —= S require » be seen in operation to be appreciated, > = r77Ie Cachgadc and Mectall af thee cons} low riers Z ~ THE WEED MACHINE SS tc err ke @ nd | ’ ‘ q ¥ ' poo wy are better adapted than anv others In the market si an ; “i 7 r Bales “a eek Wx pr a A > — Oo the Cha s aud great Variety of sewihy re a Mt MO) eo — \s B& a juired ina family. They will sew from one t LAs a i a “=° — — G2 " venty thicknesse# of Marselies without stopping o ; are ee -_ ee td rs nnd make every stitch perfeet limey will sew i i bushel Griin ~~ @ ee from the finest ganze to the heaviest cloth, and en's St s - | coe te I wile n F - ro even te stont. hard leather, without changing the a Sone j ry \ ; e ae ge Sent ; Paints & Us > needle or making any adjustment of the Machine " # Kubber Buots at lids Paint O ‘ BL I ppm ne] Two different sizes of the Wachine wre maunfac- : : 6 uemerted Untier) @& o | }tured fitted ap. pla or ornamental, with or with- ——— . eeu ies “| w. Caeta —— — i _ t hine he 1 fe ne 3 : . : co v ‘ } out cabinets. as may be preferred ‘ ( (ats Bliser Steel, - * cj 7} : ' } } iit Cuses Mi rv fens asserted Bar Tron, om re i rg - These Machines have obtained ¢ S mignon bhale ruasiery¥ Pieces PI wud Metal we - -. | premiums wherever they have beeu exhibited in Si ke } ns ~cknvea Y ae i & oa feompetition with other Machines. and 1 Packages Nats & Spikes aie = “ 4 i ! en D upery, “ [rotmonger Pa a ~ > Ms | Charlottetown, May 28, LSu6. tf Hosier Sides Sole LETHE! = = d ~ hs lidmumee. Sede iiieet ow 3 BAEAD! BREAD! BREAD! ’ ; i _ ~ Shawisaad Mantles ed Sugar Flew Eps th _ . : eS = | " . " . Towns ¢ HATS) sahs, Codbear, Ginger; pd > ~ ean 2 : . ‘ APS Cunke Bakiueg 8 a > C. i HE Subseriber begs to inform his Cus- | t a Keys Mustard Pow ; # ~~ pod tomers and the Citizens of Charlottetown | 1 -# be Boxes Tobace avis _ dd j that having FITTED UP HIS BAKERY, he is} Ww e aud Coloured. jna. Sot Lozeng+a, es mee j now prepared io supply them, as usual, with the te » Warp ty use Bave Pepper, _ I Ex . piard, Tatlewk| Weer one Masia! | Best quality of BREAD Sa upd Wene Cod Gane en : ao all est quailty Ol DOLALD, 3 = a ew | which he will send to any part of the City, wher ~ .. ‘ . ia i ? I Ecc req ured G. & S. DAVIES. ; \+. B. D. REDDIN, ( i mee 2 re Dorchester Street. JUST RECSIVED, | Per Schr. ‘‘ Vincent.” from Montreal : Great Bareains. fE711K Sucserther intendiay to wake an 4 BBLS No. 1 superfine Caurda i aitera at wes OF lit of Oe. 7 AGT FLOUR . teehee 9 i oi j tieowi urtict -s at Lie in HOS CORN MEAL, naa | 20 Bags No. P SHIP BREAD, : ; 50 do Ne. 2 de, PEA, 26 Gd to 2s Od per lb.; warranied good 33 Bosaes TOBACCO, 10’, SUGAR, 7d per ib 1IhU Sides No. 1 SOLE LEATHER, GIN. 6s Gd to 7s per gallon 150 Doz SODA W ATER, beErk , 30 Dez. CHAMPAGNE CIDER, KUM. 4« te 40 3d da. ; “ i ; | }00 Boxes SOAP, BRANDY, bcs dv. | 50 Cases CLARET, (St. Julica SMedic.) Rai} ja =,/ f exe tieal } . ALT, is Sd per bushel Also in Store: TOBACCO, Is 8d per ib 4 Caske GIN, (DeKuypers), COTTON WAKP, 16s 6d, White. | 1 Pur. Bourbon WHISKEY, Do ids, Blue 3 Casks Henvessey’s BRANDY, pale & dark FLOUR, 40s te 50s per barrel } qr. Cask U. C. WHISKEY, 1} Cask Seotch WHISKEY, GLASSWARE, NALLS, PAINTS and OILS, | aaa ny ?— > ; a Bags SALT, (Liverponi), ata Great Reductwu in Prices 12 Casee CHAMPAGNE, BiG MONAGHAN. | 10 Bbls. Bottied ALE and PORTER, Queen-street, Charlottetown, 0 | 2 ids. ALE (MeCailem's), superior. June 1S, 166 5 J. ROBERTS ECKART, von ert ras con ee Peake’s Brick Building, Water Street. Pr. BE. IaLARD July a. 1888 a uliding ater ree . . , 5 ' 5 ” ? Pp a iene Se | err or ’ 7 Steam Navigation Company’s, JUST OPENED, Steamers | MPENS KID Boots, L + Princess of Wales a eath lie LEVANT ditto Princess of Wales and Heather Belle iia een at Wake ake At W.E. DAWSON. SUMMER ARRANGEMET, Tn de The Steamer “Princess of Wales”’ | VV omen's iid Boots, EAVES CHARLOTTETOWN fr CASHMERE © May 21, 1866. ve os BALMOKAL “* 4 SUMMERSIDE. SHEDIAC, RICHIBUCT », | ‘ LASTING ‘“ CHAPFHA™M, and NEWCASTLE, every Moncay At W_E. DAWSON. night at il ow clock, reae uw Shediac in Ume tor May 21. 1866. the morning Train on luesiay- - £ Ms _ — —- a | igeree Fredine, for Eiekiverte af sine fot (Children's BOOTS and SHOES. esduy morning. and Richibueto for athens at one o'clock same day, arrivi ug At ww. Neweaustle same evening Mav zi. 1866 at three o clock on English Malt Vinegar: To be had at W. BB. DAWSOR 3. aud Ne weastle DAWSON’'S at f itham and Lesica Neweustle for shediu a) : "edbesiay tf ; ving, calling at Chatham and Riciti- | wh fur *ammerside and Charlotte onat half-past Zo clock. | arivel of the Train Leaves Charlottetown for Pietou every Thurs day ; ‘ult e;: re'aurviug, leaves Picton lor boston STEAMSHIP COMPANY. and harlotte-) 4W8t} Sreamships Alhambra. Capt. yA Drain every ety i Wav G Lens ee Shediac town on Wednesday after latmediule!(¥ ob t twelve o clock same mye mtetown ter ™t Charlettetow ns Leaves Cha : tee reece Friday morning at halt-past eivht Shed ¢ every Sumit oreide Leaves Snediae for tow ut Link?-past two, ufier qerical of Nick# son 1 ORTENTAL. Capt Fo OM aa} . NICKERSON, citi n ae Als ap + . lay afternoon, arriving ut Charlottetown ab). gail for BOSTON from CHARLOTTE laif pas: teu same Wig sf TOWN every MONDAY. connecting wau dil ferent Lines of Steamers to New York, Philadel phin aud Baltimore RATES OF PASSAGE: lat Gent's The Steamer “ Heather Belle” Leaves Charlottetown for Picton every Monday Lenves PICTOU anme arrival of evening—on Ladies Mail, aveat balf-yast four o ciock—for Charlotte Cabin. Cabin Forward te 5 . i i | To Boston, 4&2 10a £2 feos ee Leaves Charlottetown for Brale every Thureday | Halifax, 1 10s 1 tos 1 os and Sata-day mornings at five ociock ; retar. ing Cunso, 1 Os lL os l Os j to Uharlottetowa sute evenings, immediately alter | urrital of Mail at Braie, at about du clock in the | #v« f velit ' te te , reeks, LL parties indebted to the Subseribe For further information apply te the Agents, FARES: cainlniangs hi From Charlottetown to Pictou or Iyrac k, Cabin Js } file tid Charlottetown to Brale or back, Cabin 98, Steer rs tied | before the Frasr day of Nowremprn neat. ("hur pen to Sammerside or back, Cabin Ye / GEORGE HOWATT. ; Seerage 7m tid j , | Crapand, September 17. 1% D ow } port, deceased, are Feqtest d te take inimedinte . ee " Bpes po! be my Calne 1, | ; We ee eesti r ; . | st anes nf pas poets aud those having eval deimat ds ayvaliuel Ste fos | ™ i « _——— eee : ; Se ta fceniglh thes eciee Charlottetvwn to Richibaete or back, $5 00) Icoxt CRASS ECOEE i ab Cs. or mig Feipt . il raqures| i . i 9 ul : Deo Miraunelt, du OO; aa duly atiested, Te : t “4 xu “ ; tienen! Sammere vie to Richibacto Ge 4 = AMELIA FORREST, Executrix. i te :;iaiio chi, do 1 50 t i D. STAIR, 5 JOHN R BOURKE, Exeeutor. Shediac to Richibacto do m * J ae | sport. Sept. 20, brs Het...1, * ma Miramichi do oo pee Keat Street, next H. Palmer's Office. __Southp rt, Sep | Mh ten, [On sh tewn te t Jon or tru ‘ f Ne hd ’ Ahi 7 a i # eee eee ng a ae i amegpee sR — : & (lass and private Tuition. De . Portland, . do 2 j0a Od. or 5.00 | Mf Cabinet-making Upholstering,&e 6 BY pe. Weates.,.. 0 2 ihe 4, of 9 Mir) a R. B. IRVING, ” PES "PEIGC . SPU RNITURE of : staal sid yiaader, : : ee eee evel bok, MP OUENETUSS of ol aa oe toons Peacher of English. French, Writing. Do ; diondias ‘1, Ga dn as avd from seasoned Stock. andthe soveréi Drnnckes of 0 Sane, Do 1 Simnsehh fo " ” 4 Undertaking punc/ually attended to. & merc.al and Math: matical — Education. Shediac to KMiehsimeto avd ¢ ls Gd és i ie Miramichi, § | t Cofiin Pilates RELURN TICKETS to or from Charlottetown persi nvail Vieketx| @ : and Same raice. ile luble one week “ALL WORK MADE void if parties leave the I«land during the tim EXCURSION RETURN TICKETS, at one first) ay TO re ¢lavs fare may be issned at any licket Offiee. to a i e pasties of, five or more yvoing aud returting to TZ Givo Satisfaction. a #¢ther, tornd from any station within one week ‘t being distinctly understood that un!es# these editions are couplied with, the Tickets wiil be void BE ASIN TICKETS way be purchased at Ollee for individuals or families bby (irder, Feb’y 26, 1866. of best quality, Horizontal Watches in Silver Caves on. June 18, 1266. . , aa E or © ale. 4 holes jewelled.......-------- £3 10 (PRE Northern Half of TOWN Lov Do. in Houting Cases,....---------- : 0 : \ tsethe Fires Haudred of Lote.in the) Rusted stares: on <n eee ue C : » . ) io.4 ; ‘ lo F mt a , r of th : Kuglieh Levers . * ; . ; No.2, imthe First Handred phage r of! Waiteh Chains and Kevs Finger Kings, 51 Gy of Casita. pital al oe crt a roaches eae Pinan grea Suis Ae mm ome reese . . £m . PURCHASE. atchmuke Perry Wharf, well adapted for bnsiness purposes,; vy A " Smarddn's Corner. ow for rie ide : Apply te Dee a JOSEPH, BALI». » | -Charlouetown; Ott. 31, 1864- LIVERPOQL an? P pene j and <4fti" Colonial CARVELL BROTHERS will be required to pay their Aceonnuts tu full Lettered. I c WARRANTED @ Hall Tables & Hat Trees i WATCHES and JEWELLERY. ] FW. HALES, Sec'y. | post RECEIVED. from ENGLAND, INA 1; () ‘ trac Liberty, when Prvecech« CHARLOTTETOWN. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, OCTOB IMPORTANT SALE! Ttare Chance. FEVUE Subseribors, withdrawing from the r' so well known that ali comment Is Uunecessaty- PeuMs AT SALE. j September 10, 1866 Hw ’ ‘ G Harte’s Saponiiier, cn CONCENTRATED LYE, Warranted to make Soap without Lime and with little or no troulle, \ large supply of the above ‘ft article has been just reeeived | Manutacturer’s, at Montreal, aud is now on fat the Drug and Dispensary Store of Dr. G. W SUTHERLAND, Kent and Housekeepers will fiud it a wost | valuable requisite. Charlottetown, Oct. 1, BAINSTEAD. | i _ IMPORTANT SALE. i he he Sold that beautiful Estate. BIN- ' | STEAD, Prince Edward Island. containing | | | valanhle the Sule Corner of George Street. R66. tf. about TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY ACRES if very superior Land, with Honse and Out-build ings in every respect fitted for the residence of a gentleman | It is situated on the Hillsboro’ River, four miles | from Charlottetown, and for beauty of scenery 1s perhaps aneqnalled If notseld by MONDAY. the th of October, it will be divided into lots of abont ; | Twenty-five acres each, and sold by Auction, on the premises on that day by Mr. Wa. Dopp i After the sale of the Laud the whele of the HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, Stock, Crop and luplements on the farm will be seid by AUCTION } by Mr Poop, without any reserve. The sale will | be yenuine us the proprietor wishes to leav 2 the | Island The terms and partienlars ean be obtaine d from the Hlou Joseen Henstey, Chariottetowu, or Mr. | Fec_towes, at Binstead. Sept. 17. 5S weeks. Halifax Colonist, feporter, St. John. NB, Morning News RR. REDDIN, “Attorucy and Barrister - at - Law, CONVEYANCER, Xe. ‘Office: -- Groat Goorge Street, Charlottetown. (Near the Catholic Cathedral.) 1866. tf j September 3. Pek Subscriber b gs to inform the Cre zens of Charlottetuwn, avd the Country in veveral, that he las Opere {fu NEW TOG Oe i? FACTORY. of QUEEN STRERT. in the premises lately ecenpied by Mr Wourrerb. Painter, and We. SKEESTON’S. | situated Opposite Mr. Having enperintenced forthe lust seven years Ithe Manufacturing of Pobaceo, in the Fiew well Known us LOWDEN'S. with nnegnalled saccess ‘he will fearlessly warrant bis Tobacco is second fro none in the Colonies. and would earnestly advise shi casnbe lic: Gen deal sosnel dye for emmselves before the public to ail ana pudge r themselves t re purchasing elsew bere. CUAS. QUIRK. 1keG Sin Chitown ‘| Administration Notice, & persons indebted to the Estate of i Captain GhORG! ForeRest, late of Seuth open,) for both Sexes, Mr to re-open his AFTERNOON and EventnG L on MONDAY, tst OCTOBER, 1500 Afternoon Classes for Yousa Lapies. Classes for ADULT Mace Purits Teums, &e , made known on application at his ‘Mass Room, Pownal Street. Charlottetown, Oet 4, 1866. NOTICE, TOTICE is hereby given that a Speci» ow Charlottetown Gas ight Compuny will be held and for sule at alow price— at the Ctlice of che said Company. on THURSDAY, the woth day of Cetober nexs coming, at LI o clock forenoon, to take into consideration the expedienc of isening preference Shares for the purpose of paying off a Mortgage held by the representative eel Ear: of the Estate of dames Peake, Esqr, deceased, on the property of the said Coupany. r, Ly order. WM. MURPITLY, Sceretary. i Charlottetown, Oct. 1, 18u6- isl Great | Halifax | N addition to his Mornirg Classes. (0) W IRVING purposes ssks Evening Geveral Meeting of the Stoc k-holders of the \ Y. Zz AMA WY \ MYHQAQ™QUd SS ~ ZN ALY POLET CS. LEPE RA oem Mon, having to advise the Public, may speak 1, ER LsG6 ——- " 7 — 2 —_ MISCELLANEOUS. | fares where lifeim Mexieo may be seen to thy hest advantage. although the Paseode i reli, the Alemeda and the Plaza, upon whiel OCTOBER. the palace and the great cathedral front, are . Sweet is the voice that calls famous gathering places, From babbling waterfalls, _ Tn meadows where the downy seeds are flying; And the soft breezes blow Aud eddy ing come and go Iu faded gardens where the rese is dying. Among the stubbled corn | apon its own resources for amusements; but The blithe quail pipés at morn, . 4 Pl ae gay a people as could be expected from the The merry partridge drums in hid€eu places, Aud glittering mseets gleam America Above . ree ‘es | Above the reedy stream | THEATRES, FULL FIGHTS AND PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS as ee oi Re : > Remoay -langa Where busy spiders spin their fimey laces. There are three theatres in full blast, one At eve, cool shadows fall an Italian company especially um ported from | the land of song ; two unmense am phitheatres lfor exhibitions of bull fights, whish is the Across the garden wall, And on the clustered grapes to purple turning, And pearly vapors lie famous museum filled with precious relics of . ° ° 13 ‘Ie : i] cucG as i See Where the broad harvest moon is redly burning. | incient Mexteo, such as idyls, household Along the eastern sky Ah, soon on field and hill : The winds shall whistle chill, | Spanish covaliers, and innumerable objects of : / | Mexiean ingenuity, bistery, art and science And patriarch swallows call their fucks together | There are several elegant English and German To fly from frost and snow, iclub houses belonging mostly to the wealthy | commercial houses, which do not pale in com- | parison with your most famous houses in New | York, at least as far as wines, viands and the creature comforts ure concerned. One of these has re. ularly givéfi a reception every winter to their Majesties, and is preparing jeven now for one of extraordinary grandeur jon the zeturn of Carlotta, which will be in November. This, by the way, will give you lan idea of what the foreign merchants think jot the probable continuation of the Evipire ‘The ericket chirps all day (he statements in the New York papers that " the Empress will pot return are juugbed at here among intelligent people who know the | indomitable energy and force of character o! that remarkable woman. Above the foumy bar | A number of handsome fountains and And hasten southward ere the skies are frowning. | statues adorn the principal places, and in the henvirgas are public gardens, beauutul level drives, and shady retreats lor late breakfast | parties, quite recherche enuigh for the must lexacting pleasure seeker. Lhe public libra jries, imstitutions Of learning, charity, and lreligion, date, wany of them, from the earliest history of the Spanish cunquest, and are creditable in every respect. : And seek for lands where bow The fairer blossoms of balmier weather. The pollen-dusted bees Search for the honey-lees That linger on the last flowers of Sepfember, While plaintive mourning doves, Coo sadly to their loves Of the dead summer they 80 well remember. “Q fairest summer stay The squirrel eyes askance the chestnut browning ; The wild fowl fly afar | | Now comes a fragrant breeze Through the dark cedar trees, |} Aud round about my temple fondly lingers, In gentle playfulness, Like to the soft caress | Bestowed in happier days by loving fingers. | Yet, though a sense of grief THE EMPEROR S CARRIAGE ATTENDANTS. Comes with the falling leaf, | The wealthy Mexicans are particularly |} And memory makes the summer doubly pleasant. | Wek oD the subject of fine carriages, Until : } within a few years they clung to the old- In all my autumn dreams : | A future summer gleams Passing the iairest glories of the present! | ance. | hicle, which is heavily mounted with silver |}mountings, aud to an extent, which, con- sidering the price of guid in’ the United No eyes with loving tenderness glisteu-- | Siutes, would buy —y o your Broadway , }turn-outs, horses and all. Latterly, how- ever, Aioerican barvuches, buggies, and | harness, are beginning to be seen, and the | Phe angel answered: Wherefore dost thou sigh ? » pegndegmnptineticenhirten, tecadatucatimetathee toad, at onee recognized. Phe courser faints netere his race be ruu— | Lhe styie is to drive slowly and with in- tense dignity. The horses are generally Betere its work be doue. large and well kept, and in| many instance- | are brought trom the United States or Engs | The prayer-bells in my beart should summon still |land. The Emperor rides to and trom Ota- The world all day, af noon, at eve, at dawning, pultepec in an open barouche drawn by four jlarge dun-colored mules, surrounded by half a dozen mounted attendants, two of whom precede the carriage, two following it. and one on each side. bey keep their places with remarkable precision They always rattle along at a rapid trot, rather mn a busi- (ness like way, everything making room for them of course. Going through the Callcs | Plateros and San Franeiseo, the most cruwd- ed streets of Mex:co, the Emperor is cuntinu- | No ears to heed, no loving eyes to glisten— ally bowing right and lett, and raising bis | God’s little wood-birds sing the whole day long, | bat Im response to the crowds Who uncover /as be swiltly passes. When the Empress was | here she usually rode with him. | -_—<—_- CONSOLATION. “ The torrent of the world is rough and streng— I cannot sing a truth-nspiring song , Lf none on earth will listen.’ Pie meanest blossom may not, canuet die Aud not like yonder church upon the hill, Ouly on Sunday morning. The belfry ropes have hung a long, long time, But only midnight breezes make them quiver, | | Let thy heart ring like some cathedral chime, | Forever and forever. | If there be none to hearken to thy song— And care pot who will listen. Then let the roses of thy fancy peep Within the love-lit cottage of tay heart; HIS DRESS AND APPEARANCE. Maximilian wears a white hat, white or | light colored vest, blue or black clothes, and | patent leather boots Everybody knows how te looks by photographs, although tew of And, like a consecrated treasure keep The knowledge of thine art. tree.’ = Euripides. Baca- | | Forsight seeing, the visitor will find enough ‘to occupy bim a few weeks, alter which he) | will huve done Mexico pretty thoroughly, and | tingue staff of mustached, richly dress d offi may leave with the certainty of having seen) cers. M all Chat os worth visiting. A city s0 isulated, | the finest body of suldiers | have ever seen jamid the mountains of the far interior, and ‘ ; so difficult of uccess from the ses, is thrown | Prussians who have so lately eapsized Europe the Mexicans are fond of pleasure and are as . generally sombre character of the Spanish- | | principal Sanday diversion of all classes ; | ND ee te -* Massaniello”* iddition to the regular church service— secu lar music, to be sure, but certainly solemr | zed and intens:fied hy the place and th surroundings. Marshal Bazaine is alway soldier, surrounded by his briiliant and dis How they will compare with the wonderfu is yet to be known —perhaps. >. — [From the London Review J} Is 1f LIVER? | . Novel writers and poets consider the heart | People love and : s : ; ip wit! ‘ir hearts; in grief they of them giving operatic performanees with | wotahip with all sheig,b aS “s ‘are heart-sick, in despair they become heart. | brosen ; amiable people are called all heart, | aus the seat of affection | | the wicked hard hearted, ju great deal too much fuss is made about |that ever pulsating, restless organ. Tt is a beautifully complex piece — of } j j Liver, We are not going to write an essay ,on the constitution of the human Liver, to ‘describe its hepatic and portal veins, its | biliary machinery. We shall avoid ali re- ference to the various forms of disease to which it is liable—are they not written in the books of the doctors? We wish to draw attention to the Liver, as an organ of great meral action, an organel the greatest power to affect personal peace, domestic peace, and even political health. Society long since came to the evnclasion that habitually bitious people are ever more or less disagreeable. Men go out to India |jast as Strasbourg geese go imty training for the table, amiable as other men; how olten j de they return yellow —itts the Liver—to , Spend years of lite, gloomy, never indvidual- ily at ease or disposed to make other people so?) Who can say what the goose suff rs as ‘his Liver beeomes enlarged tor the pies of | Fortnum & Mason? But when he ts killed lout of his misery, he revenges the wrongs of jis own Liver by disturbing the condition of | that of the lover of pate..whu eats him. A great deal—far more than people think |—of ili humour, is the result of ill health. It misfortune, or the apprehension of it, dis- | turbs the mind, it at the came t'me puts the body out of sorts. The physical powers once deranged have the singular faculty of aggra- vating trial, and making black look blacker The Liver is the great internal despot. It | rules tne rest of oar economy with an iron |hand. The heart, brain, and stomach all re- ‘fashioned European lumbgring vehicle, with | quire healthy blood to giwe them the vital clumsy body, hage wheels, and a generally | torce neqyined for their s:veral hourly funs- jheavy, though not uncomfortable, appear- trons. This is still the prevailing style of ve- | dispused, these organs will do the best they f the Liver is quietly and healthily can for us; if it is in evil disposition, all the rest goes wrong; the blood is unnourished or poisoned, the brain-centres being weak, clill the heart’s action, spoil the stomach cookery ; vur moral vision is perverted. everything we fear is magnified, everything is more bitter that has tended to sour our peace. Friends may advise, books console—it is all in vain Biue-pill or taraxicum, a day’s abstinence {rom our favourite diet, will often solve the riddle ; we see our way, have hope again, ure at peace —why ? it wasthe Liver. Many a wan has proved a disagreeable host, or a visitur we never wish to see again: we have set him down in our memory as one of those who are our best friend when least seen ; we have mentally accused bim as one whose wile is to be pitied, his children excused {rom any amount of filial affection ; we are sure his servants have a hard time of it, and yet, did we know the truth, a lubster, # chill, a luncheon, may bave caused, for the tme, what we saw in a man who, nine days out of ten, is amiable, generous in every sense, in every relation loveable ~it was a simple vase of Liver. Liow many a man has been acurse to him- sel and others in the latter days of his lile, who oveassionally, painfully aware of the fact, tries in vain to discover why it is so, but never yet arrives at the true cause? [le blames the way be was brought up, his par- ents, bis masters, and pastors; he forgets how, as a boy, he used to graze in the kitch- en garden, devour greedily at all hours what And lift thy trusting eyes unto the sky, | these do justice to bis intetligent face and For hes veu—not earth—shall give tay words a | tall handsome figure. iis expression is | generally cheerfal, and the whole face beams | with good nature and the mstincts of a be- jnevolent beart. The Empress, whenever |have seen her, was not remarkable as tu dress, Jook:ng in that respect like any woman | uf refined and elegant taste ; but the face Scorv wot thy kind—they are His children,teo; | onee seen leaves a lasting muipression for its The dark-blue vielet rises frou the sod blended sweetness of expression with the jhauteur of the high-born iady. At the pal- ace halls, belore the death of the King of | It throws a smile upon each winter day— Belgium, ber father, Carlotta used to shine A fragrance o'er the frosty atmosphere 3 respiendent, dressed in the most exquisite hearing; Speak truth undauntedly, aud live and die Life joving, death unfearing. Seorn not thy life—it is the gift of God ; All the lung winter through, | : Phou hast had many winters—I will stay taste, and a ae the finest looking woman : in an assemblage of three or four hundred. | With thee another year. The Empress is one of the richest Princesses pil i lin Europe. as ebe is one of the most accom THE CITY OF MEXICO. {plisbed. King Leopold left her some eight APPEARANCE OF THE CAPITOL. luther resources amourting to some millions TUE Mexieo, unlike most Spanish American THE GREAT MEXICAN CATHEDRAL places that I have seen, isa live city There One of the sights of Mexico is the eelobra- is much within its limits to interest the | ted cathedral, which, among G2. splendid isiranger. Lis strange customs, faces, brilliant | domes und towers of churches springing | equipages, varieuies of -uniform, and. the | above the mass of buildings all over the city moving scenes ul daily hfe, to say nothing o | stands prominent lor rts colossal proportions, the thrtiling tistoriea! associations conneeted | b-auty of architecture and elaborateness o! with the place, all present new and pleasing joroumentation. lias the largest building an plases of life, Lie city bas largely increased | the Weerern hemisphere, and one of the since the Preneh occupation, and will proba-| largest i the word) One may wander bly proportionably fall back next year after | through its wilderness of columns and pass btheuw departure. Ab present it bas abou: | frum one portion ty another fora whole day and 250.000 mbabitants, and is the largest city | find something new to admire every moment im > panish America A preat any families | It Was tnore than a century nm process ot have removed here from Queretaro, Guana- leonstruecion, having been eommeneed in 1573 juato, Puebla, and other distant places tor land was completed in 1677. The stereo- ‘the increased security offered by the capital | typed stoves abont this elurch baving been to life and property. Many houses are being | robhed by one and another of the contending built, especially in the Western districts Of | parties in Mexico since the Independence, | Chapultey ec, and the value of land has been |am assured by a well-informed priest, are largely enhianer d within the last few years | without foundation. Some GI tts ornaments Most of the conveniences of ile kavwo to | save been re wnoved in times of public distur- other eities are found in Mex:ev. The streets are well lighted with henzive |since the days of the Vieeroys: but. the manutuctured from the pmes growing in chureh is stull very rich. [tas said that im- ever his palate eraved for, increasing his love for good things as he got more and more of them. An vccasional extra excess drove ‘him to the doctor, and he was dosed. Tue tongue once clean, be went to it once more, again to suffer the same system of porson and antidote. Thus through bis youth he was content to insult his Liver. Young ** Livers” ure very long suffering, but it 18 an eminent- ly revengelul organ, It neither really for- gives or ever forgets. It has treasured up the assaults made by Hydrarg. ec. creta, with | the auxiliary aggravation of Haust senna | it was then helpless to fully avenge itself ) Youth in all other organs overpowered the remonstrances, and cared nothing for the threats of one organ. Its day bas come, and amply does it repay in advancing age the in- juries offered to it in times gone by. The j tnilitons of dollars Jase winter, and she has | poor felhaw who is jealous of the best of wives, | gout, eaptious With ai] hisehildren, mostimpauent lof the baby: | suspects his banker; knows his servants are ali cheats; who as he drives jerks the horses’ jmouths ia disgust, declaring at the same time they have none; 18, afier all, only suf- ‘tering in Liver—taking a jaundiced view o! | lile, beeause the secretions of one organ are i disordered by the results yf the pleacanter | | past days of his life. If he evutd only be leontent to set his ill-condition down to the | laceount of all the good things tis boyhood and early manhood wad sv thoroughly enjoy- led; il be would try to arrrve at the wiiole- sume conclusion that grumpiness, irritation, suspicion, are oiten but the darkening of the . | pres ne lite through the shadows of past ex- (cess now thrown over it. how auch happier would he be! The nearest apoviecary, tf a h sensible man, would anravel it all to bim We adwit it ts buitliating to sueh a man to ‘he wid, ** My dear sir, your Liver isin tault ; _you are hy pochondriacal , lt ae find wmedi- | | ‘find all things unprove. | ‘Phe great general who rashly, foronce, on | present at Mass, and seems every inch the The Zouaves are without exception We are of opinion, | machinery, | | i el os : : . |furniture, Aztec picture writing, the verita-| prreiaiunweells very. : bepAr pnts mat AY | ble mailed armor of Cortes and others of the | manera emeps 4:10 ®..eRams..MPh OPER who says be has no friends: (ty RS a ' NEWS. e-wO, £9 and + Der Freysehutz’? | one of either sex, of the same disposition, and yet they ever seck eneh other's company. Che pretty plant im the greenhouse, which e | shrinks from the haman touch, ts alter all -jonly a vegetable of peealiar sensibility ; it |will shrivel up its leaves at the toueh of ;peer or ploughboy, the plainest or most -| heautifal of women, a bishop, or Sir Morton Peto; bat we donot know, ean hardly be- ilieve, that its timidity or feeling of offence | | at all interferes with its health and qomfort. | Not su is it with the senvitive haman being 5 ‘he or she shrnks at the slizhtest. breath of lanything which ean excite suspicion of -of- ‘fence given or recsived ; ever on the look ‘out for emotion, the mind is moved by ithe smallest social straws; the Ife ts lune continued seene of misunderstanding ind suspicion of being misunderstood. With la friend or relative of the same disposition, ‘life b comes exposed to almost incessant sor- rowand trial. Each thinks the other a good | creature —but oh, so sadly touchy! Each is forever taking credit for forbearance, and the exercise of an exéess of charity. The one is for ever yielding what the other does nos ineed whilst the other is for ever denying bis or herself Something to which the one ts alto- yether indiff-rent: both pour out for matual sympathy their common sense of the bard ways of the world, which off-rs to both alike sv much of daily ivitation. When two such people marry, if they love in. earnest they become loving plagues to each other; af they do not realiy love, their households will be martyrs to their perpetual petty strifes, We do not pretend to say that excessive sensibili- ty proceeds from Liver: but we do avow that this organ has a kind of Satanre delight in making worse the things ov r S*nestfiven as makes bad. If the peace of a household isso eas ly affected by the health of its members, and especially of those who rale over it, the welfare of a nation is subject to evil from the same cause. The hearts o: kings way be very sound, their mentions wyst no- ble, and yet how many instances have we in history, and im our own Xperience, of suve- reigns with bad health beeoming a curse to their people. What Cabiuct Minister ever lived who did not know the political value to \the land of the health of sts ruler? What king or queen ever resgned who did not learn to appreciate an even temper in ber chief minister? Again, what chief minister ever led a ministry and did not soon learn how sober counsel is difficult where any of the members are habituaity, or even occasionally, bilious? Great events are very often begot- ten of very small causes A good despot is said to be the best of rulers; but bas he not a Liver ? is he secure of happy digestion? If he is nut, thewisdom and beneficence of bis rule way any day become perverted by the mere accident of an east-wind chill or some dish on which be had supped. It would be curious to ascertain the exact nature of the preceding day's diet of a certain potentate, who in our time publicly snubbed the am- bussador of a friendly nation, and thus gave the signal for the war which tollowed. Lt might be possible to discover the probable action of some particular article of food on the constitution of one who lives the world’s enigma. Given, a mind for years cherishing every hope a sullen and restless ambition could afford ; a mind ever deep in speculation, never betraying its aim till it is prepared to act; revelling in a sphinx-like mystery, ever weighing words, Dut choosing language capa- ble at once of its own interpretation, although vpen to a far diff-rent sense in the estimation of others ; a mind dreamy with regard to the future, ever on the plot to rule out each cherished scheme: when such folk make some sudden mistake of policy. and are driven to > evil rather than admit it, who shall say, alter all, whether this tipping cf the mental balance was nota physical rather than a mental mishap? Who, with any experience of what intestinal disorder can produce of mischievous intellectual perversion, can doubt but that many an event whieh has changed dynasties, shaken thrones, led out tens of thousands to war’s slaughter, may have its true origin in this cause? It is sometimes charitable to say of emperors, kings, queens, and prime ministers—don’t judge too barshly, don't altogether condemn them as unmanageabie abusers of power from sheer wickedness of loliy—ratver, lor the once, stup to think whether it can be Liver, We have reason to believe that old fami- | lies have fallen, estates been broken ap, and l the memory of the dead become a sad subject, | simply because men Will not bring therr Bto- waehs into better order, or allow tor theef- fect of their disturbance, at the time they | wake their wilis. Whac family solicitor of large practice does not know clients who are for ever altering their wills? We have heard it said one Jarge property: was again Land again lett in fee to three persons—two irelutives, the third the doctor; that the heir chosen depended entirely on the temper of the will maker at the time; he never had the | best temper. When, however, it was fair, a | nephew was the fortunate man; with an ar- tack of gout. an elder brother: after jaun- ‘dice, the dector—for then he hated ail his ,own people ; recovering from an atteek >of he got cust on a questron at quarter sessions, went home, became very bilious, ‘wo days alter tore up the last will, sent for | Lis seliciter, but bud apoplexy ‘befor? he ar- vrived. Tle ovght to have learned the whote- vsome lessun that to make or alter your will juprightly, requires a thoreagh weighing of |your wotives, a calm inquiry int) the real justice of your likes or dislikes; above all, jtaking cure lo make allowance for the men- ‘tab arritation of ill-health. We will say no more on this subject ; we shall be most thaukful if our readers }-arn the ‘value of the question —** sat Lower? Tras ja hard, @ humiliating lesson, but there is truth in at. We dy for eer injere our own peace, the peace of others — immo- lderately grieve, and become irrationally langry, with no better reason than that—we were out of sorts. We live with bad Livers. Well, if so, let us ever try and lay ut the | right door the proportion vf our mental dis- turbance due to it. We shail be far more lamiable, more sincere im our friedstiipes and Ihance, so that its oj; ulenee bas decreased | cine, and do you attend to diet, and you will | oor luve; less liable to cause sorrow ty our relatives, or to become plagues to our hous ~ holds, if in every storm of mind, in every dense loresis along the slopesul the Mexican | mense wealth bas been buried sumewhere in) the eve of an engagement, snubbed the en | pour of mental aseidity — we ask, ** May it cordilera. witht the Vera Crez aud Mex’ean Railroad) | sible only to themselves ‘have the Gomtract to light the city with gas, | and a portion of the pipes for that pur pose French Zouaves attending Sunday are already laid. The great cost of eval.) ranged in surricd ranks around the grand al- however, must always prove a serious draw- bas, until now, prevented tts active pres cu- | kneeling on the pavement, multitudes, in tion. coal. or Some other gaseous material, can be bly stand or kneel on the pavement of the more cheaply obtained. Steam and ‘horse !eatiedral. L bad the eurmosity, the other rotireads are in ope. ation berween the ety day, to ineasure one of the several lines ol Tacubaya, five miles out, and also to) columns which support the lofty yaule of the and Tiat Its circumterence was 32 feet — Guadaloupe. about the same distance. the great Vera Cruz interior. port n ol extending fo order U ( these of Lluavana and other Spanish cities are condition. They are ] cobble stones. brought trem the neighboring jin the lolty galleries voleanves, and are | flag-stone sidewalk “ ith curb-siones. and indeed the entire material of whieh the | the noble insiraments ot late tunes. ig ol volednicrock. The streets; During Ligii Mass, when , city is burlt, right angles, like those of Philadelphia. The) of chords pealing among the grand calles (streete) Plateros, San Augustin, arches and domes of the cathedral in a man Donceles, Francisco, Espirita Sante and Sunio ner to Mapress even a stulid listener. Last severely. , Domingo aie among the principal thorough- jSunday they perlurmed the overtures to companion for a sensitive man or woman than pvols, paved withemali. round | before tie days of Bach or Porpora, are fixed are laid vut regularly, running with the troops are In attendance, several of the regi- | 5 : > ’ : s cardinal points, and crossing each other at. mental bands combine, and send rich volumes ple ; they are worthy of all comp } ‘then was beaten bccause he had done so, how [have seen thoaeands of full uniformed disgusted would he be did he know the cruth, | mess, | that had he dined more wisely he would have | jlistened more patiently! When all the tar, with them offeers in the centre—and | world was in amagement at the abrupt ter- | the pubise hea'th, back to the profits of such an enterprise, and | then thousands of men, women and children! mination of the engagement of Lord Kil-| chapter on tae eholere. | winkle, the pauper Guardsman, with Lady the truth was not known; the fact being An English company (counceted its viernity by the pries:huod in places acces- | gineer officer who modestly offered advice, and yor be tiver?’” aud them dct oo this by pothesis. -—-~9 @&& Is CuoLera Conractuus?—The report of (Dr Sunon to the Privy Council of Begiand on contains an iMmteresting Believing thorvug)i-e lly in the contagtousness cf the disease, Dr. id Probably little wel be done until the) tact—and yet the vast edifice was unfilled. | Rose Hanover, and put it down to alisortaof Simon siys*— Tue docrrine on this subject, ruijroad to Vera Cruz 1s copipleted, when | Ic os said that 10,000 persons can comforte- | scandalous inventions, how sad it was that whieh in my opinion deserves, in the present state of knowl dye, to be accepted as prac- the Earl, her ladyship's father, was under a | tically certain—suffiendy eertam, T imean, severe attack of Liver, Dr. Rodd’s brougham to be made the basis lor precautionary mea- was at the door at the very time the poor | sures—tmay be stated in the following propio. Guardsman called to go into the question of sitions :—Liat when cholera i epideuic im whole road) will be completed and in ranning seraplis, saints and martyrs painted in culos- cropped up again in magnified proportion, is Fall. [he streets of Mexico, anitke psal properGods, must be over 100 feet, and) charitable reason ; three great columns reach to the lower cir-) biliary distemper reigned, angry words were places an infection of indefinite Beverety 5 gen tally wide, jevel and kepe im execlient | cle of Gre dome. Several organs, built jung spoken. rash conditions laid down, and poor that the quality of iniect'veness belongs par- Kilwinkie had to return to his cluba rejected tcularly, 1 not exclusively, ty Che matters Lhe harsh and man; as Dr. Rodd said—* If he bad only which the patient dixcharges, by pargin cand wrdered with convenient | screeehy tones give one ap idea of the early postponed his visit tu erosvenor-square for vomiting, from bisintestinal canal; thatthese Tiis,! efforts of organ builders, as compared with two days, he would bave found the old Earl matters are ¢ wparatively non-effective at the another man’’— 2 €., in good bumuur, or, as the Freneh we would put it. in good Liver. We hear a great deal about sensitive peo- acquire assion, fur that choleraie discharzes, iffcast away with- old of all people they are the most prone to give out previous disinfection, hepart their own - offence to this organ, and at once sufer mugt mfecuve quality to the excremental matters Unfortunately there is no wotse with had resigned ber throne railroid | From the pavement to the interior of the’ set'lements ; the consequence was that old | any place, persons who are sudering fromthe Puebla (about one-third of the principal dome, with ts clouds of angels, difficulties, which had been smoothed over, | epidemre influence, though perhaps with “the slightest degree of diarrlice.. may if they ,| migrate be the means of © mveying to other moment when they are discharged, but sab- sequently, while andergoing decomposition, heir marimuin of iplective power 5 which they mingle in drains or cess- or wherever else they flow or souk, etc ~ nt mgnaaenee +: REI Simi Roe