naszmns Gazr:'r'rr:. JULY _22. one of the daring f IIW8SYTKIIISIrllBIA1Ir.- »CBOIS'.l'AI7.l' AND. SQASIAPOI. ltis plain, from what is now taking m, that our readers may shortl prepare - selves-for the receipt of intellflnce of the most important and easltin character from the tioandl Sea. Tefiathasgonefurthit Crondstadt and Sebastopol must fall; an ertions of the most gigantic nature are- dy on foot towards the accomplishment of un- ~—s~ that as the Blst and Bid s csnnensds was heard is the directln,-of siuurss. Gmnltrsanol-on tool: a squsdrood Drsgosss is reeodaoiira. lied troops were allied farees It Verse are 50,0“) str . an. liosqaei’s division had left Adrlsleple tor Shusrls. A Fiasrr is rss Buses Sn.-—0u the lbtli of June a rem.-eime iosk ace between the Tar- rible, Furious, and Descartes, and eight Russian sisssisrs. sear c‘ slo . No nature was rd .I Ilvllu. ends. Even whilst we write, Napier, with the screw division of the combined French and En- A shell fell on hos the Wladimir. Another telegrs ' report says:---The com sldjik on the nth of June. A lish fieet lies in order of battle before the bet- ries of Cronsbdt, whilst Corry with the sail- ing division, watches Helsingfors, and Hall | secure with the gallant fiying sq . ' Whether it Napier‘s intention to commence ° n Oronstadt an tinrn ts assault u is as ye doubtful ; buttho day fdocertaiuly not distautl 3“ when he will do so—and on that day Crondstadt falls. Deeply as he burns to accomplish some deed of war upon a sand scale, the gallant veteran will yet not an r himself to be hurried into an act of inconsiderate haste. Some time since, e a communication to the Government informing them that for the elec- tive reduction of the Russian fortresses upon the shores of the Gulf of Finland it was hi ly desirable that the combined fieets shoultf be accompanied by a considerable bod of land troops. Bis suggestions upon this sad have been prompt] acted ppcn; and by an arsuge- ment ente into th the Government of France 7,000 French tree are now u n the point of embarking in Eng ish ships of war for service in the Baltic. The ships to be em oyed are the Hannibal and Algiers, screws, each of 9! Que, the Revel William of 120 guns, the St. incsnt of I01 guns, and the Termagant. Gladiator,arid Sphinx, steam ships severally armed with rou. six to twenty-four guns. This fine squadron which will be ready for sea in the course of e-. few days, will be under the command of Couimodore Grey, with his broad pennant in the Hannibal. We are toid that the arrv.ngmonts for receiving the French on board are as perfectas can be conceived. The are to have the best of provisions, the best e stores, and to be made as comfortable as possible. This is as it should be; for the llant French soldiers are worthy of bein ts en care of by British sailors. In Captain oneel, who com- mands the St. Vincent, they will, in fact, find an old comrade, that llant ollicer having in s of his earlier days. as a volunteer in the ranks of the French army in Algeria, and, musket in hand, helped them to take Constantine. The French troo destined for this particular service have ulres y assembled at Calais and Boulogne, and will be conveyed to the British squadron in the Downs about the ldth or 15th instant. The may con- uently, be expected to join the fleet in the mtic by the lat week in Au ust, by which time the heavily armed dcspetc boats, and the smaller but not less power ul gun boats which have been for some time in the course of con- struction, will be there also. Now as Sir Char- les Napier has been duly informed that these. important reinforcments will be shortly des- tched to swell the lgigsntio force already at, is command in the orth, we think it highly probable, notwithstanding the demonststion he is now making before Cronstsdt, that his at-, tack u n that formidable fortress will not made until these addtional forces have reached him. An opinion is said to prevail amon some of the senior ollicers of the fleet that Cron- smdt is more vulnerable than Helsingfors. Sir Charles may have gone there with the screw division to form his own opinion upon that point, and may be, to throw down a challenge to the werful Russian fleet inglcriously har- bored hind the batteries, to ccine out and This, however, we are well assured they It is still a problem whether Sir Charles will at once commence an assault upon the stone walls of Cronstadt, or wait till the. contingent of had troops has joined him. Our impression is_ that he will not strike the blow until he has all his strength around him, and is perfectly certain of success; but before the month of August expires we shall expect to hear that the joint ensigns of England and France are triump tl floating above the ruins of Crouatadt. So, she, in the Black Sea: Sebesto 1 is doomed. The unexpected retreat of the ussi- ans from the line of the Danube without ex- chan 'ng a shot with the An lo French troops, has oed at the disposal c the Governments of ncs and England, for the capture and destruction of Sebastopol, the finest naval and _ military force in the world. We are ass _’ ' be instantly begun, and tbatthe 10,000 additional British troops now under orders for the East will be conveyed di- rect to the Crimea, where they will beJ'oined by the greater part of the French an Englis troops now at Varna. Sebasto I will then be dmulpaacusly assailed by in and sea, and the rei of ussiau despotism over the we- ters an coasts of the Euxine will be brought to a bloody and final close. Tss CxAs’s Rsrnv -ro ‘Iris Eur-rscs or Aus- llects were at division of the Russian fieet left Sebssiopol, and having fired into the com ' fissis, returned again to port. The Furious sulfercd some dais- ‘I0- lii-rsiinru Arncir cs Csossnu1-.—-llsir- sou, .lui.v 4.—'l'lis combined fieeis were on t thq 99th ult. drawn up in line of battle before 1Cronatadt. The general attack was expected on the following day. General Barsgusy d'Hillicrs was to leave Paris with a division of the army under his command for the Baltic. England provides vessels for transport. Sierui. Duran or run Rusiisrr Asirv Ill ‘ Asi.t.—Vrsriru, Wsnru:snsr.—'l‘he ussiau commander in Asia, Prince Andronikofi‘, has been deciaivel defeated in s field action by the Turkish army on er Selim Pasha. The Turks numbered 34,000 men ; the strength of the Russian army is not stated. liirtsen pieces of cannon, 35 stand- ed in the hands of the victors. The rout was com- plete. Tait Trrocsssn Ions Taccrs run run litacx S£s.——It is now known that the reinforcements to our army in Turkey will smeunt. in new regi- meals, drafts, and detachments, to nearly 10,090 more troops. They are to sent as soon possible to the east of war. or rather ssquicltly as steam tonnage can be procured. The imslsys, Capt Kelloclr, takes out another regiment of cs- vslry, and it is reported this magnificent ship is‘ hecorne the property of the Crown. ralty pay for her hire nearly £0,000 a month, while she could become the property of the coun- try for-—say, .€l30,000 or .€l~l0,000-just I5 months’ hire. The General Screw Company's new 2,700-ton ship Prince, will take infantry. 'l'he cost of her hire per month is about £6,800. When the above have all arrived we shall have more than 40,000 British soldiers in Turkey. Rureum Pitrr-Ass-riorrs IN Poi.irm.—Russis is incessantly melting warlike preparations. The Russians are now occupied in enlarging the cits- del of Warsaw, by increasing the fortified points. To that end, one hundred and thirty houses have ‘been pulled down. It appears that the possibility of s siege is credited. any families who have been unable to satisfactorily account for their means of subsistence. have been compelled to leave the town. Whilst regiments arrive from the interior of the country, the troops hitherto stationed in the capital are directing lhsir march towards the rhesus of the war. Their immediate destination is the frontier of Cracow, or that of Gslicis. At‘Cxenstcsclisn and outlying places, ‘considerable detachments of Cossacks are on their way towards Cracow. Provisions and forage are already wsntin . The Pulse much dread the consequences o the war. To the taxes that have for a very long time most heavily pressed upon them, has just been added in the towns a levy on ‘ income, and that at the very moment when trade is completely paralysed Advices from Warsaw, of the lat inst., state that all the houses in the streets near the citadel were to be deruulislird for the immediate enlarge- ment of the foriiliastions. (From the European Tistss.) We have no further news from Sir O. Na ier. marsund, a stron fortress in the Aand Islands, has been successfully bombarded by a couple of fri tea, but we do not hear of any occupation o the island. it is very desirable theta stro body.of troops should reach the Baltic without de y. The Gear is using every efibrt to gain time, but the sooner they are sent the better. ~ A serious insurrection has broken out in S in General O'Donnell marched out of hrdrid at the head of two insurgent re imcuts on the 28th June,and all S in was eclsred inastate of siege. The 8I.lSOll entered the capital by the Atocba,and was well received. ; As some of the garrison remained faithful to her cause, for several days we had every rance of a civil war The latest accounts snagagement had taken and the insurgents on the 30th ult., in which the troopsof the Queen gained the day, and the insurgents sufisred severely. later telegraph'c « despatches by no means warrant the belief that the insurrection is atan end, overn- ment were wsitin for reinforcements from ‘Saragossa and Va adolid, which might join the insurgents or “ ronounce" on the road. The frightful depravity of the Spanish court mainly contribu to this insurrectionar umovemcnt, hutwe strongly an that General "'""‘w'f"l:'° _u ‘.°h ‘"3’ WE" Names is at the bottom of it. Just at this "' '° ‘.5’ ‘’ °‘'"''v;“ '““?° ‘°';: "» 'uncturo. a convulsion in the mother countr kofsrrived here on ne s evening .s rsr ,0 “I. “ha, no‘ ghugtgn ' of the oficiel reply of the St. etersburg Csbinst. It has not transpired what this answer is. '!'!ie Prince is also bearer of an ‘autograph letter from the Emperor Nicholas to the Emperor of Aus- tria, the tumor of which is said to be. that evacuating Wsllachis and leaving the Danube free, the Emperor considers that he sstisles the -reasonable desiands of Austria. Moldavia will eat be evssastsd, as till occupation of lhlfiprlnclo psliiy is a necessary guarantee for the conditions of s futon trssiy --f peace. If this be correct,s war between Austria and Russia is inevitable. I-ladji Petvss h.-.5 been cusiplstsly defeated at Kalabsh, is Thesaslsy. The his belt have taken scsndin stilie mouth of the aisster, not far sad have had some trifling skirmish-' C with the Cessscks." . l Cassessnrire Ill rss Disscrics er Ssvuu. --advises from Verse, of the lid less. ltslfl. Tax by dated and°t.he°weters ofstrife sears likely to stream out pretty abundantly. Russian Rs-raocuns Movnrssr.—-A letter, Belgrade, June 29, ssys:—Tbe movement ln retreat of the Russian army continues in Wallechla, and the right bank of the Danube must be now sntirel evacuated, excepting the fortified positions of hlatshin, lssktsba, and Tultshs. The concentration is bein e in Moldavia and Northern Wallac is u tlfie Trsqs lVIIIllphfl.'Obll!¢i0l'. lti_sa co: c an o nt,wt ea eso a cat, 50,0(s men Acrslscssibd ls‘; on ghnfield of battle or destroyed by disease, and a deep smln upon the honour of the Russian fiag. Burris irasa Sruuais-2,500 Bsuuirs Brian. The Wanderer of Vienna has the follcwiu mmommimwmmnumwad ing to“ advsus. The rea srds. and three complete camp cquipagcs remaiu- 1 The Admi- _ $3,“ Pasha. the Gcvsirnor of lesser Wsllsohis. bu statsd olclally that, aecordigggo a dsspatch from Omar Pacha, dated the , the Russian of 25,000 men and 24 ‘seas of The battle, which lasted two days, ended in the defeat of the Russians, w are said to have had 2,500 killed. All the Russian troops are stated, on hearing that the army of Shuinla was about to march te at them, to have abandoned not only the environ ofSilistria, but also the Dobrudscha." V Tn Bar.-ric.—'l‘he fourteen neutral vessels now lying in Ri have despatchsd a deputation to Admiral Nap er. to beg permission to pass out of the harbour. The deputation is now in Dsntsic awaiting Sir Charles’s reply to their request by the weekly Mail. A New Poe-r-orrrcx.—An oflcer of the fleet in the Baltic communicates with his friends in Edinburgh in rather a novel way. an cruising about, he throws his letters, into the sea in a bottle, trustin to their being icked up by aoiue English in in vases and forwarded to their address. we of his epistles thus consigned to Father Neptune's direct l custody have come to hand without delay, and ‘ it is questionable whether, if sent by regular ! course, they would have arrived at their I destination within the same peri Np:-II: 1 Brilirli Msil. ' l GNIIAL Scnii.nsss.—General Schilders has 3 died from the efiects of the amputation of his . eg. The loss of the limb has been followed by the loss of life, but the test loss to the army, in addition to thato his distinguished talent, is the destruction of that charmed life that he himself, as well as his men, believed himself to be r. e was a man much addicted to fantastic notions of the invisible world, and who couversed much with spirits “ whife and y," consulted the “ psycograph," and has at length met his death from too great confi- dence that his life was bcmbproof Mxuncnonv Cass or Daowiinvo.—0n the even- ing of Saturday lust, Wm. Campbell, ., bro her of Sir Angus Campbell ofDunstsfi'na , with two servant men. went 0 in a small sailing boat with a lug-sail, to an island which lies in the ofing. ’lhcy were seen on their return making for the harbour about half-past ten b a man who was walking up to Conuel. The unstafiuage family did not feel much alarmed at the rty not returning that ui ht, owing to the nature of the business that ca led them from home; but next morning they be- csme uneasy, and instituted a search, when their worst fears were realised by finding the little craft, with her sail set, waterlogged, near the shore. Diligent search has been made for the bodies. but no trace of them has as yet been found. This melancholy, accident has cast a gloom _over the whole neighbourhood Mr. Uampbsll was a fine looking oung man of about tvient -four years of age, and his attend- ants were a ut the same age.—- gow Chris- tian ties. [The gentleman mentioned above, was the third Son, of the late Sir Donald Campbell, and the eldest of this family that resided on this Islaud.]—-En. Gsz. Prom late American Papers. Cor.i.rsoir ar Sas.——‘l'wo Airxaicax Snrrs —We find in the New York Commercial the de- tails of a terrible collision at sea. T American ships Olympus and Trade wind came in contact on the night of June 26th, at about 11 o'clock, the weather bein cloud and the night excsssivel dark, and t e win blowing fresh from Sout west by South. and ually, in latitude 41 50and longitude 57 20. tb shi s are said to have had igbts burning, and e Trade wind saw the ligbtof the Olympus, and altered her course, but lost the light and did not discover it agpin until it was too late to avoid collision- he Olympus was struck be- tween her main and foremasts b the bows of the Trade Wind. The smr bow of the e Wind was, stove, the cutwater and stern were crushed, bowsprit and fcremast were bro- ken, and the wood ends from keel to deck were believed to beopcned- The Olympus was made a complete wreck by the collision, her main and misen masts were knocked out of her, and she was found at daylightin a sinkiu condition and soon went down. The Trade ind was so much injured that she soon began to settle, but being loaded with cotton, s e fioeted long enough to get out her boats d construct rafts, and make provision for the safety of both ships’ companies, the Captain and part of the Olympus’s company havipg t on board the Trade Wind at the time c sips were in contact. At daylight the Olympus was in sight some five miles dismnt, and her ca tain and boats crew were allowed to take one o the boats belonging to the Trade Wind, to visit the wreck and endeavour to save any of her com ny who mi ht on board- Captsi Wafltce succeded n reschin the Olympus, and rescuing every man from the wreck. In the meantime the Trade Wind continued to settle, her decks burst up, and those who had not found laces in the boats were com lled hke re u in the missen top. One 0 the boats discove a sail, immediatel gave chase to her and succeeded in reachin er and turning r course towards the Trade ind, which was reached and most of her company ssvsd, after an exposure rrors of death for ten hours. The rescuin vessel proved to be the Belgium barque Sta t Antwerpen terboven. On mustering. it was foun that of the two wrecked shi ‘a com nice, 96 out of 1!) had been saved. he Ba ‘ u captain and his companyudid everything u their power to e is aecssion to their number as 8 cs ‘two wrecked ships char- tered a fishing boat of Block Island, on the 4th pikluly, and land at Newport, and thence tsned to ‘N k, to 1‘ rd l b s steamer to tli: b:r'que, won. wgsecmtnpi “ g to! prcvlsi . cannon was attacked on the 22d, pear ilistrls, 1 Wall street. Her freight is vs by Girotli Meheinet Pacba, the new governor“ that fcrtrcs ring ho own 0 COIIIICI’ . countries, to these ,Cat. Wy-s ,. The Trade Wind is said to have been one of the fiuest clippers built in New York. She was 2,018 tons bnrthca, about three years old. va- lacd at $100,000. and is largely insured is ucd at 350.000. and the car at about $250,000, the letter be- prinoipa ly insured in En land. She was ed b W. Platt it Son of bilidel his and gar. and others of New Yer . The Olyrn us, Captain Wilson, was owned by Messrs. Geo. Callender d (.‘o., of Boston, and others. She was 744 tons register. valued at $40,000, and was frei hted at about $8000. She was built in 1850, at ennebunk, Me. Slie sailed from Liverpool on the 24th of May, and was bound for Boston, huvin forty pas- sengers, and a crew numbering thirteen. She was frei hted with nine hundred tons of iron and hsrd‘ware.—-Boston Traveller. Tsxsrv.-A Washington correspondent has the following : “ The story published in the N. Y. Express of Monday of the rejection of the Reciprocity Treaty is a ure fabrication; it has not been reported by t c Committee on Foreign Afiiiirs. I understand that the members of the Commit- tee are equally divided, and it is expected that the treaty wil be reported near the close of the session, with an amendment, striking out the privelege to British subjects of fishing on our coasts north of lat. 36, as unconstitutional. The_treaty will doubtless lay over till next ssion. ' In Baltimore a Hebrew woiuan who was sup- posed to be dead was dressed in her shroud, placed in her collin and the lid was about to be screwed down, when it was discovered that life was not extinct. All present immediately gathered around the collin, and the enshrouded cor so like form arose from her narrow bed, on embraced her children and relatives with all the fervor of renewed life. To all appear- ance she bccuine convalescent, and subsequent- ly rtook of food. She remained in this con- itiou until the approach of night, when she lettered to the ed an in a few moments breathed her last. The Kingston Herald states that a Soldier of the 26th Regt., was shot for deserlion. on Mon- day the 18th ult., ut the rrisou of Fort Hen- ry. It is added that the General commanding in chief si ificd to the troo s in Canada his determination to carry out t e articles of war in such cases most rigidly. Prof. Stowe has publickly announced that he will not shave till the Fugitive Slave Law be repeald. aisz.npe“a;ze£&£. Saturday, July 82, 1864. Ir, at the beginning of the “present century‘ on had even so much as hin , that a missin riend might be found, in what is new term Australia, but which, by a common ll ure of s sch, which puts a part for the who e, was t en termed Botany Bay, a most deadly insult would have been supposed to have been couched under the expression. Not so now, on the con- trary, ifa young fellow is missing ofi the stand for a short time, we naturally enquire, not where he has gone to, but whether it is to Cali- SITNL fornie or Australia, as if there were but these two places in the world worth lcavin ones own r. And, in truth, amen t evarious changes that have taken place within these few years last at, nothing has been so extraordi- nary as t is simultaneous exodus from all ld- roducin regions. The mere acquisitiono gol we loo upon as entirely subsidiary to the great and important changes which are now in o ration. and will continue to affect society in all its bases, for these many rs to come. One 0 the most tifyiug and satisfactory of the ever-chengin eaturcs of this remarkable period, is its self snlliciency, to make use of a term in a lauduto- ry which has generally been used in a depre- catory sense, by which we mean that it is all times ual to the exigency of the moment. Has the possibility of trensmittiu intelligence by the electric spark, been rov to be theo- retically ccrrect before you iave well get over our admiration of the isccvery, you are informed that the invention has been practically appliedto the urposos of ever day life. and that neither ountain or Velsy, Forest or Desert, or the even rolling Sea itself, can oppose an obstacle to its ‘ other wonders that are daily unfolding themselves; and so it is with respect to Ocean Navigation. Australia is every day becoming nearer to the whole world, from which it was at one time, so far removed, that deportation to its shores, implied the almost im ssibilit ofevsr returning. s were ed into the above train of refiection n by having Australia papers ofso late a date as , t e 10th May last, lpid upon our able, for which we are indebted to the liteness of Messrs. G. W. Owen and Robert ssaard, who have just returned from thence. Fifty years since, this would have been an utter impossi- bilit , but how much this time may be’ short- en , no one can tell, for there is at this moment going on,cne of those generous con- tests between the builders of Steam and those of Sailing'Vesssls, that has rendered it doubt- fnl wbic of the two methods of propelling these “leviatbans of the deep,” will gain the scendancy. Even now, the going to Australia is not looked upon with half the apprehension that crossing the Atlantic was, at the time referred In lhct,emigrstiou has become the order of the day, than the exception. And so it should he, should man remain cooped within boundaries so narrow, that it becomes a question whether the land they occupy will reduce suflcient food to enable them to subsls , when 1 :r H regions of uncultivated land. which will absdfh su us pc’]:.ul;tioa of over-crowded seuutres a. progress; so with ; - Steam, Railwa s. Tunnels, Tu ular Bridges, 3 "I, and s thousan and is the rule, rather "' The pa rs to which we have alluded, are th airing Herald, tbs ' , also pub‘. in Sydney._ and _ Q4...’ Nsiss. They contain nothing of any great 1.. £’.‘::.2‘.':°'z...l"" '23‘ '.'.’.l..i'.‘:.':‘."’ 2......’ ""' ‘:1 ‘ill llllpolil sad _sxports, as wet as the quality or go it transmitted, and will prove, we doubt not, interesting: the three Ry of We may direct attention to the results lull years, (the early period of‘ the Ilia colony.) and to compare the he scesitha ig. ports and es in each year. The Customs‘ de- psrtmsntdaclsvee the value in these years to base follows -— ' Experts. ' wipsrts. l IBM £1,709,918 £l.|I8.“| 1 ms ;,eos. I as ' ‘I858 4,888,840 3,808,781 £l0,984,888 £8,8l8,18d In I85! the balance is lhvosr of experts was .€8I1.98I. In 1852 the halsscs was still on thsssmesids, re the amount of £1,708,590 In IS“ a very dilsrent result e vs; the im- I,SIS.d’l’l... ' the three ports exceed the exports by £ Taking. however, the trsasactiaas for {t|!lzr:,a8ll|I balance is favour of ear ssperts ls £1,- For the quarter sad‘ the ltk of April, ultimo,‘ we are only in ' fitlta Customs ahstrast efitbe values of goods exported hence is Brltishand Fu- reign registered ships. This return shows the trade with the various countries is saccassica, sescrdic to the regulated arrangement of casatrles, and sslii its the quantities and values cftlss variesa s ' ed to each cssutry. he gross sutolntl of our experts, seeurdisg is this return. may be rhas rscspitslatad :— o itsis £486,814 ictoris . New Zealand 18.088 Van Diarnes'a Land 87.”! South Australia 1,800 South Sea Islands e.0I8 Ilsuritius l .880 a "ti [.888 Foreign States 11,!!! Singapore 5 Tot 818,008 The above exports were is British or eslasial registered ships. In addition, there were a few a few trifling items exported in Foreign valued at £544. or the exports during the quarter to Great Britain. the chief items were :— ~ £801,185 ll 'l‘ar.i.cvv, §8l toss, ll cwt ".405 To Victoria the largest items is the list are bottled beers, and drapery goods. be above amounts do not include our experts of old, of which a separate account is kept by the usloms. The quantity shipped here from the lat of Janus to the 80th of A il ultimo, was OI,d8s ozs. I0 wts., the value c average quotation of .68 its 0C is. Cd hicli, at car present .'psr cash, 5 £888,- Wuli r t to our ex (exclsdieg geld) the result of the last sartsr s a great improvement on the four p ing cues. Quarter ending April srh. 1058, 1140.3 Jul lib, llal, 749,106 . Oct. Milt, I888, 80,080 Jan. lth, I854, 504,414 April ltli, IBM, 8II,8I"I lie quar- This shows an increase as t tar of I868, of £72,888. with to ear wccls, we are enabled to re- port_s still increasing tendency to At our public sales, h h prices are obtained far 010"!!!’ clips. The war ike news from Europe vveald, was eupppesd vs in iufiesass bstowin to I advance in the rats of are a, wool s lsllow have obtained their full vs ac. line clips of wool may be quoted at from ls, 1|d."ls ls. 8d. Inferior uslities are scarce y ed. Is tallow good bee obtains 54s,; matters us We observe that the Legislative Council of New Sou Wales, had met, pursuadt to ro- clanistion of proro tion, but wsreeoaipe led to adjourn thanise ves fora week, in conse- uence of the absence of Excellncy the ‘ov_crnor General, “ cwingl," says the Co- lonial Secretary in his spssc , " to some unfor- scen, and as yet, unknown accident." ADDBB8 '_ tows, or or run oaaiin nivisiow or sits -rssrrsaaircs or r. I. r. , To Rev. John Mchiurrsy, I’. G. W’. P. S. of'I'. ‘ 8ir.—Althcngh snksowa to the men of u ‘all , yet as one who has lsbusrsd sss hand ientl , la the cause of Temperance, dad the lbelislf o ' ' lwell known and your ' appreciated. We therefore hail year t as, as indicative of mesh pod, set icalyiciliecauss "whichwearef topsrpsta- : sts," bet is the Church over which, yea are. is the I prcvideuse of God, called to preside _ ‘ 1, We desire to present ear tissste year tale :helcvsd partner sad family, a tract" that year sojourssmcagstssmsy be a scareeefmstaalplea- 1 "iii. would now in behalf of an cvdsraflbe Seas nf 'l‘en-psrasa is this lslsad ofi‘er yes a welcome. ’ ' a J. Pinwar.r., W. Hsaas ‘- Aasx. IIcAcsr.aws. P. Dssnarsav, G. S. Committee. -1 IIPLY. llzflscled Brethren ; The k‘ welcome on have tendered, ask the sea- tisients cfraspact wit which you have been to notice my arrival smssg yea, are appreci- stsd by me. - is t perity of the cases of ‘fan see, with will yes with myself are sally tlfied, . I have leug felt a hearty interest. I has_i_ssasa't:y gives me mach pleasure to bear sssasss eh‘ has attended your s_fi'erts is this sesss ssdasw to is 8 hspss Is this respect’ Divlss blsssisg h the dense , ssasst hit is tifhl lelaad exceed- , ss- die- I Iy agreeable to m “Allow ts lrorir . it sat fan ..,....'°...°'u=iii. he ye: