ta A Weekly Howenal of Politics, Literature, and “This is tene Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Pablic, may speak free.’=--Enuripides. Vol, X. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Taesday, SPECIAL NOTICES. | ( i | | p \ ) | i 1 l \ f Hotroway’s Pirts.—These Pills are more efficacious in| + \ | } \ § “ strengthening a delulitated constitution than any other medi- | QU a) N SQU AR % te Bed 7 7 Se eine in the world. Persons of a nervous habit of body. and) all who are suff-ring from weak dige tive organs, ot whose | y R. BENJAMIN DAVIES begs leave to annouunee to his | bealth has become deranged by bitlious affecti ns, disordered | 2 lrivuds and the public that he has purchased the entire | stomach, or liver complaints, should lose no time in giving : lea ‘ STOCK IN TRADE, these admirable pills a fair tral. t oughs, colds asthma, or) eee loiters ye bay in the briery lane ; shortness «f breath. are also within the range of the sunntive | as well as the premises above named, formerly belonging to | Lik - yonder Tas mae - i = wers of this very remarkable medieme. The cures effected the late Cuartss McNvrt, Esquire, and that be intends con-| “*° # long ine of spears brightly burnished and tall. ¥ these pills are not superficial or eemporary, but complete | tinuing the business ander the various branches of ‘ : a “ wad permanent. They are as uid as they are efficacious, and BRITISH AND AMERICAN GOODS — the white highway, eee fleet, may be given with confidence to delicate temales and young . F = = 7 | Et dashes thie dust with He nembertons Tout. chiidren. dealt in by his predecessor. Like a murmurless school, in their leafy retreat, er rte tre wr rrr RRR ert te The STOCK consists of almost every variety of Goods in| Lhe wild birds sit listening the drops round them beat ; . : » haw cpcsmsibie whee » Ped teaie all demand, having been selected by an experienced hand in the| 49d the boy crouches close ty the blackberry wall. ARiscellancans, OL Aa a all al el et THE SUMMER SHOWER, Before the stout harvesters talleth the grain, As when the strong storm-wind is reaping the plain ; } A Desraasie Preparation ror tor Hatr.—We with plea- sure refer our readers tu the preparations of Messrs. Joseph | Trade. Burnett & Co.. of Boston. The want of their Cocoaine has long been felt in order to dispense with the many iolerior preparations now In use, We speak, after giving it a trial, and can conscientiously weommend it to the old and young as being a preparation ot | inestima'ie value for the purposes intended.—Sr. John (Canada) News. The swallows alone take the storm on their wing, And, taunting the tree-sheltered laborers sing : Like pebbles the rain breaks the face of the spring, While a bubble darts ap from each widening ring ; And the boy, in dismay, hears the loud shower fall. lie deems it necessary to notify the customers who dealt at the Cheapside House, that for the future the business will be | }conducted on the cash principle, and that no goods will be delivered to any person until paid for. It will be tie care of the Manager to maintain the charac- | ter this Shop bas earned and well deserves for 4 | PRIME AND CHEAP GOoDs, ‘TmaT KNEMY OF \/ANKIND, Consumption! can be cured, but) by providing the best description of »rticles which he conceives, it is lar better to prevent the cruel disease from fastening itself) by selling for cash only, will enable bim to provide future! And the rain spatter’d urchin now gladly perceives on the system, by the timely use of a remedy, such as Dr. | Stock at the lowest rate, and thereby be enabled to dispose of | That the beautiful bow bendeth over them all, Wistar’s Balsam of Wild Cherry attords, it at lower prices than heretofore known And soon are the harvesters tossing the sheaves ; The robin darts out from his bower of leaves ; The wren peereth forth from the moss-covered eaves ; +See + ee eee ees } c! arlottetown, Aug. 7 1860. Is] tw. si. . ft Says MRS. WINSLOW, | ——___——_._ s cmendreren 1 ONE BY ONE. An experienced nurse and female physician, has a soothing | IN ew Shape One by one the sands are flowing, One by one the moments fall ; Some are cominz, some are going, Do not strive to grasp them all. Sevrup for children teething, which greatly facilitates the pro- | & P R t N & & fia 4 R T ey cess of teething, by softening the gums, reducing al] inflama- we 4 w Ie i ' | tion—will allay ali pain, und is sure to regulate the b wels./ A large lot just received, by Depend upon it, mothers, it will give rest to yourselves, and J. WH. TURNER & Co., relief and health tw your infants. Perfectly sate in all cases. } See advertisement 'a another column. i to be sold at about MALF THE USUAL PRicEs! On ny one Se ‘ote = ate ao . . ‘ ,2 2 ) Puoic SoU ro ty each RN PRN NN British Dry Goods Store. July 3, 1860, Let iD deci ae te u _ WHEN WE SAY : Oe et no future eamns elate thee, . ee , YODLINES., Learn though first what these can teach. That Mrs. Winstow's Soothing Syrup acts likea charm, we) i CARPENTERS’ CHALK LINES do but reiterate the language of every person who ever used SALMON, MACKEREL HERRING and | it fur their children. for all diseases incident to the period of | é P SAIL TWINES. | teething, such as lysentery and Diaria@a, Wind Colic and VHITE, BROWN and YELLOW SHOE THREAD. | Cholera Infantum. [t wil! produce quietude and rest, relieve! 4 Jarge supply of the above for sale by all suffering. and the infant will awake invigorated and re- ™ CHARLES DEMPSEY. | freshed. and not with the dull and stupefying effects of pre-| July 3. 1860. parations vf opium. Sold everywhere, 25 cents per bottle. |; ————-———— -<~— _~ — -_-___-_ - fa Do not fear the throngmg band: Uffice, 13 Cedar-street, New-York. FLOUR & TEA, One wi! fade while others greet thee, cibwrrtianbinirdiituario~aruuaial ORE Te = iiaildliee “a ECEIVED this day, and for sale by the subscribers— | Shadows passing theongh she: laa. ONE oF THE UUMANITARIAN MOVEMENTS OF OUR Tres although | ; Ton E a : r little known as such can hardly be over-estimated in its im- | 200 bbls. Southern F LOUR, warranted a first-:ate article. | . 20 chests TEA, 1 case LOZENGES. yortance upon the well-being of oar widely scattered commu- : ie cent el é ; August 7, 1860. 3 DODD & ROGERS. nities. The populition of the American States i8 is many ia —" i TEA! TEA! | sections so spuree, that skilful Physicians are hardly available {UPERIOR CONGOUU, | to them. Vast nuobers of our people are obliged to employ | in sickness such medical relief as they can hear of from other or indeed any they can get from any quarter. [lence arises | » TUE CUOILCEST SOUCTIONG. the great consump a of Patent Medicines among us, greater Chis Spring’s importation from England — Wholesale and by far tian in aty of the old countries, where skiliul physi- | Retail at cians are accessible to all classes. Unprincipled men have long availed themse!ves of this necessity, to palm off their; July 3, 1860. worthless nestrums, antil the word has became synonymous, —— with impositwn and cheat. One of oar leading Chemists in the East, De. Aver, is pursuing a course which defeats this | sation iniquity. He brings not only his own, but the best skill of our | Commission Merchants, times ty bear; ter the pr sdaction o the best -vomedice Ww hteiet: . <s i ean be made. Thee: are supplied to the world, in a eonveni- _ . is baat Bal. eye ued | ent form, at low peri ee, ell es D *U} le will no more buy pour “i HOL ESA LE and RETAIL PRO } ISION PRALAE medicines instead good, at the same cost, than they will Great Gorge Str-et, Charlottetown, ? E isiand, bran instead of Boa The inevitable ¢ msequence of this is, “ Bi ise en See vee that the vile compounds that flood our ¢ jantry are disearded ALWAYS ON HAND, AT LOWEST MARKET RATES— BRANDY, Pule and Coffees Dar k W hite Sugar Rotterdam GIN Brown Sugar Cream of the Valley One by one (bright gifts of Heaven) Joys are sent thee here below, Take them readily when given, Ready, tvo, to let them go. One by one thy griefs shall meet thee, Do not look at life's long sorrow, See how small each moment's pain, God will help thee for to-morrow, Every day begin again, Every hour that fleeteth slowly, lias its task to do or bear; | Leminous the crown and holy, If though set its gem with care, J. H. TURNER & Co's. Do not linger with regretting. Oxfor passion, hours despond ; Not, the daily toil forgetting, Lok toy eagerly beyond. Hours are golden links. God's token, Reaching heaven, bat one by ene Take them, lest the chain be broken Ere the pilgrimage be done. From the London Saturdau Review. IMITATION LORDS. for those wi! ich he ently aceoluy lis!; t! e end mn view —which FLOUR TEAS care. Do we over estimate its importance. in believing that| orn Meal this prospect of supplanting the ty-word medicines, with those | Ship Bread of actual worth and virtue, is fraught with immense ¢ ne- Crackers quence for good, to the masses of our people.—Gazeite and | Rice Mulasscs Jamaica ‘Te is a great thing fur plebeians to get an oceasional Chronicle, Peru. Ia Pork Mustard Demerara Ram glimpse of the inner hfe of thearistoeracy. Knglish sociery _——— PPP LLLP PPL PP PLEIN | BACON Po; per Scotch Whiskey is so ex -lusive, [English babiis are so reserved, that hut for WiISTAK'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY. Hams Spices M it Whiskey that blessed institution, the Luselvent Court, this valuuble This remedy has long been cherished by the community for Bath Chars Pickles Port Wine adJition to the common stock of a-efal knowledge would be i's remarkable efficacy in rebeving, healing and curing the Cheese ain a ae unattainab’e. Lf it were not for that revealer of all secrets. most vbstinate, paratol and long standiny cases of Cough. | Tobacco — M amare the * detaining ereditor,”? we should vever kuow how the Cold. Influenza, Se e Throat, Bronchitis, Whooping Cough.| Manila Rope Vinegar Claret ee \ bh sie “he ab : . ’ 7 . . -j we “a, «} Soap Cirim pagne }pecublary prov @ings Which ConVvuise Our vulyar homes are Croup. Asthma, Inf unmatron of the Lungs, while even Con- | Oakum . age 6 pay vp Jiaposed of in bat ia} hall b far the bumble p! { sumpéion itself has yielded to its magic influence when all! Colza Oil Candles Bottied Ale & I orter |‘ aeons of in aronial valis, or how ar the dun ep nat « other means have fathed. Lis whele history proves that the Albertine Sperm Candles Marasching j natural affection can thrive ip the icy C imate of those lordly past has pr duced no remedy of equal value, as a cure for the t’aints Starch Noyaa altitudes. Here we have, in thes mple prose of the Insolvent numerous and dangerous pulmonary affections which prevail | Paint Oils Saleratus Geneva Court, the habits of the caste so often deseribed by Mr. all vrer the land Glass Indigo Blue +» Old Tom” : ‘ ; } te Donn Red the following Order Milk f unch From a res} cetable and well known Droggist. | English Soda Water, and namerous other smaller erticles, all Londyn Importation, and all warranted. Bright as wrapt up in luxury and debauched by opulence, «reid out before us with the homely miuuteness of a monk- ish chron cle, Trave.lersia an uuknowa country are api to i make up the’r chapters on * Manuerg and Customs” from a em Liberal advances made against CONSIGNMENTS at © nie ction of Singie instances, if we-were-te adopr this ‘all times, on receipt of Guods. method wf ascertaining fags, We should lufer that it was the May 29, 1860. ly vhabit of Koglish Peers to wiaintain their younger sons, up niente to the time of their majority, on £12 a-year and their keep —a housemaid’s ordinary wages; and that it was ther practice to send them to college with £100 a-year, which is | Cuaxtorretown, Paixce Epwarp [sianp, i June 21, 18S. t Messrs. S. W. Fowre & Co., Gentlemen :-—Y.u will please send me snother supply of De. Wrsrar’s Batsau or Witp Cueery, and also seme more of Tue Uxycenaten Uitrexs, the sale of which Lam happy to state, is steadily inereasing Those who» have tried either of them have borne willing testimony to their efficacy as Sonny . iseases tu which they are respectively applica- a. ee ined yours, ae North Side Qucen Square, opposite the Markct WM. R. WATSON. | MPORT ATION from tae ade United States :—- this peculiar treatment of younger children in a class | Certificate of T. B. BARKER, Esq., | a. Bee ediaiwaendind menbeind: Wooden and Earthen- | s!ruzgiing +0 emalously to heap riches round their titles. | A well known Druggist. - ware, Faney Goods, Upper and Sole Leather, Buckets, | [t is the Wholesome instinet of accuwulation run mad. tt St. Joux., New Bavunswicx, June 8, 1860. Brooms, Washboards, Clothes-pins, &c.; Soap, Candles, | was the same feeling that, in the old nollesse of France, | Mesers. Sera W. Fowtr & ©+., Buxton, Mass., Tobacco, Cigars, MOLASSES, SUGAR, TEA, Rice, Figs, | would lead fathers, tur generation atier geueration. to cone | Guntlemen :—I feel constrained from a motive of justice, to | Raisins, Currants, Confectionary, Apples, Unions, Nats, s gather children—all except the heir of the bouse—to a | inform you of the results attending the sale of your valuable | Biscuits, Crackers, Lozenges, Pepper, Mustard, Coffee, | monastery’s living tomb. remedy, Dr. Wistax’s Batsaw or Witp' nerry. Although | Z (HEAP GROCERIES! a little more than the lowest sum on which @ servitor can | live. ‘Toere would be no d:fficalty m as-igning motives for | : an ee | Unsfortunately, in Eng'and we} . . Y . . | co Ginger, Starch, Blacking. Candle-wick, Shoe-finding, ke. h : i : hate te as sae, | ¢ , . ‘ | have no mouasteries, and theretore there is no dusi-hole into | I do not feel at libercy to mention the names of parties who | Upper and Sole Leather eut to order ; and other articles ’ ; ; aamhet caiiat — bbish as: veungerschildres have a big!) appreci» tion of its worth. I can truly say that for | too numerous to mention. which a eh can s 100t snc a sd as a eli! re - . . | . . * « . ’ g * 7 P 4 t > coughs, colds, and ai! pulmonary diseases, this remedy performs Presh Fruit - Oranges, Apples, Nats, &c., just arrived from | eXvept a pu lic office or a family iving. Bas mgt ane. there cures not excelled, :/ equalted, by any other remedy known, | Boston, a stock of which will be kept up during the | remains no resource but to let them roll down those easy and I therefore conf lentially recommend it to those who suf- Summer. | steps to ruiu—the University tailor, the money-leuder, and fer from pulmonary <ifficulty. Yours respectlully. ithe gal. After all, itis ouly, in a more lingering fashion, | FB. SARS Ch. Town, April 24, 1860. | drown'ng all the puppies of a hitter except ove. ta Caution to Purchasers. The only genuine Wistar 's | —_—— : | terTs’’ | Whether, in producing the results which this wretched Balsam bas the written signatore of 1. Burrs’? and the | HAYING AND HARVESTING an cuales bcdedaiedl “ge cana arent gobo ‘ >, cat he te rapper ; all ther | a : a ° . . ’ ripted one of the Proprietors on the outer wrap} my Se Machinesand Implements. | of his order or only after his owa noble instincts, is hardly 18 vile and wortl:lesr | : 4 c b s io hardly Free ee ee eM ae es sae ae ont ECENTLY received from England and the United States, | worth inquiring. It is no business of ours to decide for him and for Sale at the Charlottetown sale by W. R. Warsow. (general agent.) T. DesBrisay and | | what amounc of saving will make it worth bis while to brave | M. W. Seivxer, Charlottetown, and by draggists generally | | the discredit of being represented in the cells of Cambridge idionuge: bh ethene aetna | | MARECTL TURAL WAREHOUSE & SEED STORE, jail, The case has a beariug of a more public and general AVER'S CATHARTIC PILLS. : Manny's combined MOWER and REAPER, for one and two|}ing. [t naturally sugges:s reflections upon the status of | The sciences of Chemistry and Medicine have been taxed their ut- | : most to produce ths best, most perfect purgative which is known to Griffin & Son's best SCYTHES, in variety, ; . hie : | horses, ‘the mock nobility of which this insolvent is a menber. Lt) man. Innowerable prov fe are shown that these Pits have virtues which Patridges bevt quality Steel HAY FORKS, | { . ” ne j would not he right to wound feelings by recalling names | surpass in excellence the ordinary medicines, aod that they win unpre- : i ' cedentedly upon the evieem of ali men, They are safe and plexsant to | Horse and Hand HAY RAKES, (large assortment), which the public has forgotten; but any one who bas paid | take, bat powerful to cure. Their penetrating properties stimulate the -ORADLES for Grain, various sizes, — ; much attention to the aristocratic peecadiiloes which in recent vital activities of the boy, remove the obstructions of its organs, purify | soy THE SNEATUS and STONES, in variety. _ | yearshave been disclosed to the public eye by judicial pro- | Nee en ee eee oat ann ee a om oa face | N. B.—Manny’s two horse Machines have been if use in) @ edings, will have not'ced that these lackland titles, these | breed and grow distemper, stimulate sluggish or disordered organs into | , j : Ss ers, and have given every |}. ae 2 ; : : ail e yj ation | their abuse cquhanated mpart a bealtay tene with strength to the whole | the Island ae ist theca Ua the'Soed thelial Modiers'| lords without a lordship, seem to have o peculiar atiraction system. Not only-do they eure the every-day complaints ofevery body, | sttisfaction, proving aa 7 ldddter of Mactines' on Wwaudip tet moral and peeuviary esclandres. We have nota word | bat also formidable and dangerous ciscases that bave buffled the best of and Reapers extant. a the numbde *. : . 6 te ‘ tt 4 to say against the peerag.. Lt has definite functions whicn | human kill, While they produce powertal effects, they are at the | jymited, Farmers had better make early application to the)” as faltijled Se Spee F the ms f Englishmen: | sane time, in Jimini-hed doses, the safest and best physic that can be \Subseriber. ‘Terms liberal. | it bas fulfijled to the satisfaction of the Mass of Log! isumen. | employed for children. Leing suzar-coated, they are picasant tu tke; W. W. IRVING. | Whatever philosophers may think of its * anomaly,”” we have and being purely vegetable, ure free from any risk of harm. Cures sostee ‘s Saebmatinkee bs | | come to look upon it asa practical and valuable court of | ve been wade whic! surpass lef were they pot subs a } Nee ee ee eh hl Ce aie a > 5 ous | a of such exalted posit on aad character as to forbid the suspicion of | EDUC ATION } appeal on the not unfrequent occasions when the capricieus untrath. Many eminent clergymen and physicians cbave lent nd Me ‘and wayward House of Vommons is treacherous to its trust, | pames to certify w the public the reliability of my ogeotim while others | T the Monthly Meeting of the Board of Se held The plea that is available for the peers is, iu a secondary | har : the assurance of their cunviction that my preparations | is dk: i ordered that the following notification! , ee tae a: a. ena zt : A eueiittae tcedaganely to the relief of my afflicted, suffering tell.w-men, | ~~~ this any 7 Te usar dnets ‘— mE deszree, available fur their heirs. E dex PQ04. if wot ine? | Be iaADE ted IF AT Se eet: d:ately, are at least prospectively, use!ul. But none of the-e | Tae Avent is pleased to furnish gratis wy American Almanac, con- | a 4 ndihelid Ho 01 oh ih 7 , ; ir cu 2 : ge terins have expired, or who have entered | a : ‘ ' taining directions for their use and ¢ertifivates of their cures, of oe woh dothe hast tailed inchs Ra ‘quent to the passing cousideratious apply to the titular and shadowy lordship that | f. New ing complaints : =- bid brn: . Pete | ae : , am i. \¢ ° ; : : dactid hae "otin: | et cng or Complaints, Rheamatism, Dropsy, Heartburn, | of the amended Education Act (2nd May, 1860,) will be ad-| ts attributed in courtesy toa certain class ot younger sons, | Headache aris ng from » foul stowach, Nausea, Indigestion, Morbid In-) itted to an examination at the Board Room, on the Jast\ ‘They ure no genuine part of the peerage. for they have none | activa of the Bowels aud Pains arising therefrom, Flatalency, toss of | « ach succeeding month. Candidates are required of the favetions which make the peerage a reality. The ' , ' aie Ctalen an edie: Thursday of eae x " | peerag | Appetite, wll Ulcervus anci Cutaneous Diseases which req ‘to attend, as ahove, on the day previous, at ten o'clock, for | are the sutilers aud’ camp-fuljowers of tbe aristocraiic army, | eine, Serofala or Kings Evil. They also, by purifying the : ae : : : a ee , Siond bad eguldiediag a < eyttnn, cure many comuptaiuts whieh it would | the purpose of performing eer HN Me NEILL dving nuve of its work, wad discrediting it by their excesses, | my ttn Lf anything with a handle to i's bame gets into a police evurt | , d th ald h, such as Deaforss, Parteal Blindness, ! Sige a om fossa fasts netdng inam © how otats of ’ Paes Se shee WREST or insolvent court, it is pretty sure to be one of these imita-| Kidoeys, Gout, aad other kindred complaints arising from a low stateof) Ohgrlottetown, June 28, 1860. | ada mets ’ I 7” Se ACARD T0 THE SUFFERING. | ! ! i | } STEPHEN O’MARA. ; | ; i | i Charlottetown, June 26, 1860. tf. i ; he, an sai i ae | the dy or vbstruction of its tunctions. . i They are to be found in abuudanee in all the Do nut be put off by sowe unprincipled dealers with on eee pill softer aud Jess creditable waiks of }ife—in all the profes-ions | oat ee sa F end par taaapdiad etl he in ite iutrinste The Rev. Witt1au Cosatove, while laboring Pee eo in el whch give the pretence without the reality or the rewards else. No other they es = i best aid there is fur them, | was cured of consumption, when ail other means had failed, by a receip | uf lnbone.; Ties Ten a great ieature lt shciiiaita ieee a value or curative powers. The sick want the al ’ | eediaed from « learned physioiwn re siding in the great city of Jerddo, | wet ; fal : at. They | and they cheuld save it : settent hatniat | This rechipt has cured zreat wumnbers who were sudfering from Consump coniradistinguisbed to the usefal, portion of the army, Ahey) «uae by De. J. C. AYER, Practical and Analytica emist, | tion, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Coughs and Colds, and the debility aad | cougregate about the Court, clothed in quaint pase well, dlase. ' c s sssion caused by these di-orders, ‘ ~: ; snselyves by quaiater names. and charged with no | Paice 25 Cre. rae Box. Five Boxes ‘aes ee — are actiea meat 1 will send thie receipt, which [ have | an ae 2 a of witee oe om pr 1pe rties of a | pind AP OPP D PTO O , » ne eee | parbiediar duly except tii ‘ing as & ope 7 tee t . ib me, tom i} who oved it tree of charge. iN ad : : 4 ; ARBY'S TR. COPMEROTLS is the as and Re! breught home with asides attnceataadiinaaiads pageant. ‘Taey sine most in the lower walks ot diplomacy, a, ee. *, Cae” tes ‘leaneing, curling iE M. COSGK ’ ral Cull ‘ture of ti ‘Wes them au BD owt arcicle for creasing, beautiying, cleansing, Sold by 490, Fulyon Avenue, Brooklyu, N. Y. where the pecuilar structure Of toeir mince g — pepeerving sad restoring the bait. Pn tT 7 . unapproagbable command of smalj-talk. Naturally, they | al! Drogeists & Porfuisers. , July 3... -00+005-9m nist of life, and the cold thougnt of the tomb is the skeleton lof all feasts. Lam», we do not want to lie down in the muddy grave even | }asks if they shal} not meet again, to which he replies: +I Island to avoid such difficulties. August 21, 1860, New Series.---No. 32, | ‘ppear at their worst when some ustoward freak of forvené | ebdites of the mistress of the world, and stripped three bu,hels j tusses them up into the House of Commons, of gold rings from the fiogers of her slaughtered knights, | Yet they are more sinned against than sinning. They and made her foundation quake—fled from bis couutry, | hold a position in Eng'i-h society to which no orher ¢lass in| being chased by one of those who exultingly uni‘ed his name the community is condemned, They have all the disabilities | to that of God, and called him Hanni Baal—died at last by and none of the advantages of rank and wealth, They are! poison administered by bis own hand, uolamented, unwept, in the ouly set of men to whom idleness is prescribed by the! a foreign land. jconventionslities of the Eaglish world. [nu this ecountry,| Caesar, after having conquered e‘ght hundred cities, ond activity, ina greater or less degree, is the normal condition | dyed his clothes in the blood of ong million of bis foes ; after of both the wealthy aud the poor. The poor mau must work | having pursued to death the only rival he had on earth, was | hat he may live, ‘The rich man finds that his wealth sur-/imiserably assassinated by those he con-idered his nearest jrounds him with duties and besets him with calls which, even | {riends, and in that very place the attainment of which had | f he had she inclination, he has seldcm the courage t» evade. | been his greatest ambition. ) But the cadet lord has neither wealth nor work. The ace | Bonaparte, whose mandate kings and emperors obeyed, cumulating maxims of his order deprive him of the mainte-/| after having filled the earth with the terror of his name, nance which the younger son of au afflicnt father would | deluged it with blood, and clothed the world with sackcloth, commonly receive, and etiquette cuts him off from the means|clo-ed his days in lonely banishment—almost litera!ly ex- | of self-support. No occupation worthy of the nate is open /iled from the world, yet where he cou'd sometimes see his lio him, unless he degrades himself by taking orders for a| country’s banner waving over the deep, but which could not ‘mere livelihood. The only other lucrative professions are|or would not bring him ail. jbarred to him by the common consent ef the world. What} hus, four great men, who, from the peculiar situation ‘attorney would give alord a brief? What patient would of their portraits, seemed to stand the representatives of all itrust his body in a lord's bands? And if a lord was to think| whom the world evils great—those four, who each in turn of becoming a merchant's clerk, Mrs. Grundy wou'd go| made the earth tremble to its centre by their simple tread, raving mad uvon the spot. The natural result follows. He? severally died—one by intoxication, or some suppose, by poi- like Lord William Osborne, *‘ of no profession or busi-|son ming'ed in wine ; one a suicide; one murdered by his | ness.” He lives at Gogmagog on £12 a-year, * doing! friends, and one in lonely exile. jenting. This “ do'ng nothing.” in a young gentleman ot jan enterprising turn of wind, soon involves an acquaintance }with dog-fanciers who procure money, and idiliahasdbieng| | Jews who lend it, Extensive dealings with a University } } | {8 ” GO pee A Hiyt to Druccists —To prevent the constantly re- curring cases of poisouing by mistake, it has been suggested that arsenic and other poisons be put up by druggists w red | paper, aud marked with the skull and cross-bones, as is dove in some parts of Europe, and that in fluid poisons the samo symbols shoald be put ou the bottle. This the most illiterate could understand. —_—_____— ailor,** sumptavus breakfasts” with giil.” in Nortolk-street, follow in due course. It is one of the disadvantages of the |wreiched youth s position that he is universally credited with ‘wealth which he neither has nor can ever hope to carn. The | winisters of debauchery know better than to discourage the | ‘reckless extravayance of a lord. ‘“ All lords are pigeons, ta! ¥ 2 | be plucked if possible,” is one of the first teshana af their TUE LAND QUESTION. jeraft. Even if they happen to have arrived at the distinction | 7 nt 5 | between an elder aud a younger son, they count on extorting | Tu following Memorial was unanimously adopted at a | from the ray the house by the sup neue a | large Public Meeting, held at St. Andrew's, St. Peter’s Road, mere natural affection was too weak to obtain. nature | he Spl . ‘ . ,s0 callous to both motives as that apon which they have| apt ther ear dig ho bee. es stumb/ed in the present instance is a rare misfyrtune. | Ang chair—and is now republished at the earoest request of some }s0 they pluck pitilessly ; and when the crash occurs, and the | of its principal promoters, with the view that it may afford | scandal comes out at last, the Ra ical newspapers observe | come useful information to the tenantry on the Land Ques- with complacency that this comes of a peerage. he bid bike bhes Oe oe oa se 3 bmitted It has nothing to do with a peerage, with the essential | mr Yer , pores .# morn af eerie PAE principles of which it has no connexion. It comes of im-) to the arbitration of the Commissioners.—Lo. Ex, ‘porting mto our system one of the worst features of the | 5 eg foreign aristocracies to whose invariable failure the success; TO THE QUEEN’3 MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY : ‘of the English aristocracy has been so marke! a contrast. | waves ‘Ve s'¥ The descent of titles to the poverty-stricken younger sons, | The Paes Petition of the Inhabitants of Prines Blwerd a . as well as to the wealthy elder, has been the rout of rotten- e t ta . ‘ bess which has more than once brought foreign aristocracies| In forwarding their Petition to your Majesty, Petitioners ‘to the ground, It creates a caste of titled paupers, of drones | beg leave most respectfully to renew their assurance 0° aud loungers by profession. The English peerage, if they | Loyalty and attachment to your Majesty's peteon and family ; wish to flourish as they have hitherto done, must make up| and their adherence to the British Constitution, and pray their wiuds to let these dead branches be struck off. Ln a/ that your Majesty’s Government, throughout the earth, may ‘eouutry where rank caorot earn for itself a subsistence, the | be always administered with wisdom and purity of intentions, | divorce between rank and wealth cannot safely be maintained, | for the honour ef your Majesty--the happiness of your ‘Lt is true that this class ef younger sons have occasionally | people—and the prosperity of ali yout dominions. risen to distinction, An analysis even of recent Ministries; 00 looking around, on the freedom and happiness enjoyed | will show several caecs in which—poverty not having accom. | 9Y your Majesty’s subjects in the sisser Provinces, itis with | pavied this sham rauk—it bas become innocuous, and has not | sineere regret that Detitiouers have to mar the general tindered the usefulness and eminence of its possessor, Qn | barmony with complaints to your Majesty; but the people ‘tbe other batd, there is no ground for believing that the in the provinces hold us in derision, for submitting to be- | younger sons cculd not make their own livelihood for them-| come Tenants for usimproved land ; and with hawiliation ‘selves as successfully as any other Englishman, if a faw and shame we must own it, that the monopoly of the land ia ‘field were only given them. Bat the peerage must adopt | this Island, which bas been so oftea complained of, for » either the oue measure or the other if they wish to avoid the} period of nearly seventy years, remains still without any ‘scanda!s which are far more dangerous to their existence | redress—a hot-bed and nursery for corruption and oppression. than tweuty years of Mr. Bright's invectives. Kither this| Yet it is a great satisfaction to petitioners to bave it.ta wake-believe nobility must be abolished, or it must be sup- Say, that it is not from any andue exercise of the Royal ported by the competeuce without which it beeoms a nuisance | Authority; it is of the servan's of the Crown we have to both to possessor und everybody else. As miatters stand ¢ mplain-—-who bave misuaders'ood the Royal intentions, uow, it is a source of real danger to the order with which it | aad given encouragemet to conspirators, to ensuare the la- is professedly connected. 1: threatens .o involve the genuine | houring class of British subjects, to deprive them of their aristocracy iu the comtempt which waits on the dissojute and | birth-right.by placing them in the position of aliens, and ‘ihe idle; aud coutempt to a privileged class is the certain | reducing them to a state of bondage as Tenantry—to have them to reclaim wild lands, and pay rent for their own im- ioe | provements; to enable conspirators to gain an improved BEAUTIFUL EXTRACT. Kstate, by the labor and means of thei¢ fellow subjects. To v age Kamael tues © Relea ak explain the Cuse more fuily, it will be necessary to refer to he following wait, afloat on * the sea of reading. We CP | the first colouization of America, as handed down to us. from an exchange. We do not doubt its paternity, but it; When it became advisable to coloniz? America with contains some wholesome tru bs beautifully set forth : | British subjects, your Majesty's ancestors thouzht it neces- Men seldom think of the great event of death until the sary to grant exiensive Teritories to mon of iuflaence and shadow falls across their own path, hiding forever from | property : who were to introduce families. and settle their their eyes the traces of the loved ones whose living smile was grants, and to enable the Grantees to settle the people and heraid of destruction. >. <i <-> > ithe sunlight of their existence. Death is the great antsgo- | do justice, they were empowered as lords of the land, and t “| sovernors of the people. Such Grants were a public benefit We do not want to go through the dark valley, for a time, for the transportation of families from where they although its passage may lead to paradise ; and, with Charles | were strsitened for room, to where they had full scope for .| their exertivas, But in process of time it was foand that But the fiat of the debts due by Cyulouists to the gramtee were never to bs : s discuarged, but liable to be ineveased, through his influence Taere is no »ppeal or relief from the great law which dooms | over the Legislature, and grants which were a public benefit us to dust. We flourish and we fade as tue leaves of the) at first, became a benelit only to the Proprivtor and his ad- forest, and the flower that blooms and withers in a day has | yeren:s, und a burthen aad yexatios to the rest of the cum- not a frailer hold upon life than the mightiest monarch that munity. ever shook the earth with his footsteps. Geverationsofmen) ft jg an admiited principle in the British Constitation. apvear to vanish as the grass und the countless multatude | ot the public lands in their wild nataal state should be that throng the world to-day, will to-morrow disappear a8 ¢ranted to a few persons for their owa emoluments, so that the footsteps on the shore. when . _ | other subjects who required land, mast of necessity receive In the beautiful drama of Ion, the instinct of immortality, the lund throug’ a grantee upon sueh terms as he umaychoose so eloquently uttered by the death-devoted Greek, finds * to dictate; cousequently the [mperial Goversment Sad to deep respon-e in every thoughtful soul, When about to yield | ompromise with such Grantees aad revoke their Grants, his young existence asa sacrifice to fate, his beloved Clemanthe | ‘But the greatest care has beeu taken im the grauting this : Tne Grants were made, have asked that question of the bille that look eternal—of! tot the Grantees were to defray the Culouial Civil L'st, aud the streams that flow for ever—of the stars, amog whose |'in such amanner that they should uot make fenants of ficlds of azure my raised spirit hath walked in glory. All) British subjects. Grants were made by order of the Kinz were dunb But while I gaze upon thy living face, I feel in Council, for Grantees who were to pay a Quit Reut io that there is something in the love that mantles through its defray the Colonial Civil L’st, and settle their Grants with- heauty that cannot wholly perish. We shull meet again,/i, four years with Fureiga Protestants, or forfeit their Ciemanthe.’ Grants. Foreigners bad uo right to a share of the public ~inal reriyrt geene f lands the same as British subjects, and although a forfeiture A PICTURE. is not declared in the Grants for the non-payment. of Quit At four o’elock in the bright summer morning of Friday, Rent, yet a forfeiture is expressly declared for noa-settl- nearly 330,000 men stood on God's green earth, to begin the; meat with Fureiga Protestants. whieh condition appears to work of slaughter.. For seventeen bours the multitude sway. | Have been introduced iato all the grants, for the express par- ed to and fro in niortal strife ; now here, now there, the surge | pose that the Grantees should not be landlords over their of battle rolled until night closed in around the retreating fellow-subjects. . As it is implied that if the land had beea ebb. As if hell itself had broken loose, the pesls of thunder | fully oceapied with British subjects within the term of four from the clouds which blackened the eky towards evening | years, the grants must have expired then foc non-settlcmens drowned the roar of artillery, and the glaring lightning flushed with foreigaers. s j . in company with the fires of the canuon. Picture it to your But the time for settlenent expired, without the intro. self. The gigantic Alps on the one side, the hills of Volta | duction of foreigners, ani the land remained unoceupicd, + on the other, the Cb nese runving on to the great plain of saare for British subjects: who. believed that the forfeiture Mantua, and in that narrow place 359,000 men doing death's would be enforced, aud that they would be settled without business with all the murderous implemen's of modern war- | disyaragement, in fee-simple, Petitions from’ the Island to farce. Our boasted civilization comes to this, rivers dyed with | that eflect were forwarded to the Llowe Government as early human blood; stacks of ccrpses piled upen the plain ; shouts | as the year 1787, und about the year 1502, the then Lieut. of triamph and groans of despair; wen mutilated for life ; | vovernor had iustructions to pass Acts for the regular pay- m'sery, mourning and de-olation. Verily, the prophecy comes | ment of Quit Reyt, and te revest tac forfeited land im the true, and the * birth of freedom takes a bath in blood.’ Orown, nines atte it appears that there were only a party of the Grantees Movrxevt Grose or toe Canerr ov tae Four Wok in the conspiracy to make Tenants of British subjects ; and erors.—It is a remarkable fact that the career of four of | the main objects for moving in such euactments at that time the most renowned characters that ever lived, closed with | were to induce the Grantees, who were not in the couspiracy, some mouroful and violent death : to give up their grants to the Licut. Governor aud. other Alexander, alier having climbed to the dizzy heights of | speculators in the island, (for nominal or trifling sums), who ambition, and, with his temples bound with cbaplets dipped would join in the conspiracy. Por when the trans‘ers were ia the blood of countless nasions, jooked down upon a con- made, and the officers of the Colonigl Government, who were quered world, and wept that thore was not xnother city for receiving their salaries from the Lwperial Treasury, had him to conquer, set a city on fire, und died in a scene of eithor obtained grants for themselves, er were taken into the de' mach. pay of Grantees as Land wit ts, the Act to me fore with kings and princes for our bedfellows, nature is inexorable, Haunibal, after having, to the astonishment and coasterna- | feited lande in the Crown, oras tion of Rowe, passed the Alps, after haviug put to flight the | and rece:ved all the solemuities of law, was bd. a Mle wie goeien: Be we ee ee ee Sao ern te arena arene mes ee * a — a aia Si soma «| meh Pr ee ae | at OT IE IITE Bit i a A OOF AE: GS rege en tt: Pmt Pea ew ote OR