Che Exam _ mer mee were EDWARD WHELAN] sv RE ENE CP a ~~ ile o> i _ eS Chis is true Liberty, when Free-born Men, having to advise the Public, man speak fvee.——BURIPIDES. Wer. A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS. Vor. VIL. Notice to Tenants on Lot 67. FENHE Subseribor hereby notifies the Tenantry and Settlers on Township number Sixty-seven, that he has been ap- pointed the Ageut of Lapy Woop, for the management of the said Property—end that an immediate Settlement and pay ments of all Accounts is demanded. WILLIAM H. POP Charlottetown, Nov. 23, 1857. lm = anne ~ Building Lots for Sale. WO very fine BULLDING LOTS, the property of the late Captain Joun Anverson, one fronting on Fitzroy Street and the other on Hillsborough Street, They are ina pretty and pleasant part of the City. Terms liberal. , de ° . D j For particulars apply to the subscriber, on the premises, CATHARINE ANDERSON, Administratrix. Charlottetown, Noy. 23, 1857. ___. Parm for Sale. FFVUE subscriber offers for sale a FARM, containing 127 acres of LAND—25 to 30 acres are cleared, the remainder | is covered with excellend Hard-wood. There isa new DWEL- LING HOUSE on the premises. A part of the Farm is a Freehold. The Stock will be sold with or without the Farm. | It consists of 8 head of horned Cattle, 12 head of Sheep, 1 | Mare, 6 years old. Aiso,—30 acres of FREEHOLD LAND, 12 acres of which are clegred, and within 2 miles of Alley’s Mills, om the St. Peter’s Road. The former is an excellent stand for a public house, as the nearest public house is seven miles: or for a Scioolmuster as | he would get employment in the settlement. For further | ‘ particulars apply to JOHN KANEEN, on the premises, St. Peter’s Road. * : Lat 34, Nov. 16, 1387. ow NOTICE. epee Tenants of Sir G. Graham Montgomery, Bart., James | I Montgomery, Robert Montgomery, William Mont- gomery and G. F. Montgomery, Esquires, on Townships Nos. 34. 51 and 59, are hereby notified that T. Hearm Havitanp, oi Charlottetown, Barrister-at-Law, has been daly appointed | the Agent of the aforesaid. Proprietors to manage their afore- suid. patates. The said Tenants are therefore requested to pay allarrears of rent without delay to the said T. Heath Haviland, at his Office in Peake’s Buildings. Nov..9,.1857. Isl lin T. HEATH UAVILAND. To Freeholders, Merchants, Mechanics, and also the Tenantry on parts of Townships Nos. 53, 57, 58, 59, 60 aud 62. 2 TAKE NOTICE! FEVHE Local Government not being ina position to purchase the ahove property, | now offer. on advantageous terms, at PRIVATE SALL— Twenty Thousand Acres of fine fertile LANDS on these Townships, in LOTS from Fifty to Fiye Wundred Acres each, or in quantities to suit purchasers. A most favorable opportunity will thus be afforded to Freeholders, with large or small capital, to pur- chase Farms for their rising families within a limited circle of their own homes. ent To the Tenant who may feel anxious to beeome a Free-| 8nd, from the fabrication of a pin to the elevation of a palace | holder, whether under a term of from One. to Nine Hundred | 0° ® pyraimid,—which launches the ship on the sea,—which and Ninety-nine years, every reasonable encouragement will be afforded him to purchase out the fee simple of his Lease- hold tenure. But Tenants (or individuals) taking forcible possession of private property, and whose object may be to enjoy the same, withont payment of rent. or making arrange- wents for its us+ and eecupation. cannot expect any further indulgence, as the law must of necessity be rigidly enforced against them without any respect of persons—they are there- fore earnestly requested to prevent such unpleasant and ex- pensive proceedings being instituted against them for its recovery. te Plans of property may be viewed between office hours | . -* . rte ’ ’ ? . aa e e . ‘ sn | tand in the presence of that great commercial revulsion, | SUCC°?ssive 82 3s of domestic or foreign war—ano'her ** Niobe 10 and 3. All letters must be pre-paid to receive attention. WILLIAM DOUSE. Ch. Town, P. E. Jsland, Sept. 28, 1857. For Sale, FREEHOLD PROPERTY, thirteen miles from Charlottetown, the most eligible situation for country business on the Island, situated at Vernon River Bridge, Lot 50—where vessels drawing ten feet of water can load at the Bridge—the publie road from south | side of the Island running close by the shop door. There are on the premises a DWELLING-HOUSE, in good repair, con- taining on the lower floor a Dining-room, Drawing-room, two Bed-rooms and Kitchen, ulso a Shop 24 x 20, on the upper floor two Bed-rooms ; a two-story GRANARY 40 x 25, with double | floors ; a new SHOP 48 x 20; a Store-hoase, Stable and Coach- hoase, and a good Well of water close to the house. For fur- ther particulars apply in Charlottetown to LENJ. DAVIES, Esquire, or on the premises to the proprietor. Uetober 5, 1557. ROBERT BARKER. se bead eae ee ae CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, M Gleanings from late Papers. ae ie ONIN RRR IRL L LOLOL LN LI LN LLL te tm ‘THE FINANCIAL PANIC IN THE UNITED STATES. } We are indebted to a late Boston paper for the following | | speech of Mr. Cushing, formerly Attorney General of the. United States, delivered at the Festival of the Massachusetts | Charitable Mechanic Association, in Faneuil Hall, on the. subject of the present financial panic in the American Union. (lt is not only an ornate and eloquent manifestation of intellectual power, and as such well worthy of an attentive | | perusal, but as the most truthful and encouraging exposition of the causes of the panic which we have yet seen published, } ; we deem it not unworthy of a place in a Provincial journal, well knowing that the Provincialist as well as his republican | neighbours are deeply interested in everything that concerns | the monetary relations of the great Republic :-— Mr. President—I know not whether it be fitting, whether it be not presumptive in me, even at your call, to respond to such a sentiment. In this venerable hall—conseciated by the ,memories of eloquence and patriotism in the New World as “never yet was temple or cathedral by the rites of religion in the | Old World—in this consecrated hall, when the public men of our country are but mentioned, it seems to us that its old walls become instinct with the spirit of life, that the voices of the mighty dead ring in the ear to the solemn echoes of its vaulted roof, and that the great figures of those proclaimed rebels of the Revolution, John Adams, Samuel Adams, John Hancock, | | Thomas Cushing, Paul Revere—and of the departed statesmen | ONDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1857. [EDITOR axp PUBLISHEN. Apart from that | confess [ have been amused to observe how much of undue importance, in the great sum of our wealth, industry, and commerce, has been attributed to the extra flounces aud furbelows of the jadies. It is in truth a matter which enters fora mere bagatelle into the complex question of imports and exports, and that isa'l. Did the siiks worn by the ladies produce the fanlure of the Ohio Lite and Trust Company ? Did their superfluous laces and musiins break down the [linois Central Railroad? Did their voluminous skirts stop the wheels of the Mrie Railroad? Was it a fancy of theirs for cakes and sweetmeats, which raised up, or pniled down, the speculative prices of sugar and flour in the United States? Was it their k d gloves and hiliputian bonnets and slippers which occasion- ed the embarrassment of the great dry goods commission houses of Boston, and the suspension of the banks of Pniladelphia and New York? Absure. I confess it shames me, as a man, tohear so much said of the profuseness of the ladies, in view of our own way of life. Most assurecly, Mr. Fiz Frivel, with his champagne, his cigars, his fast horses, his yachts, and bis other fancy psstimes, has no right to complain of the fine robes, the broidered kerchiefs, and the dijouterte of Miss Flora McFlimsey. She will discover that she 18 in want of nothing to wear quite as soon as he will find anvtbing useful to do; for even she has a warm woman’s heart beneath al! the point lace and moire antique in whose mysterious volume her fair form is draped: and if he did but know how to reach that heart, he would see her as prompt to please by frugality as by luxury, and proud to make any sacri- fice of fashton at the voice of duty and of love. Butall the follies of all the Fitz Frivols and Flora McFlimseye in the land are as nothing, in effect, on the financial condition of the United Siates, compared, | will not say, with a war in the Crimea or mm India, for that we do not aad cannot have— but as compared with a few cents per pound or yard of rise and <Gilapqenagiltaanenai een ~aaapaseang ee oe INCIDENTS OF THE INDIAN MUTINY THE STORMING OF DELHI. Delhi has fallen. The City of Assassins, the rallying place of Treason, head-quarters of the miscreants who slew the women and children at Cawnpore, and hovered like beasts of prey around the walls of Lucknow, thirsting still for blood, has passed for ever trom their hands ; and the Royal Standard of England floating again over its ruined walls, proclaims the re-establishment of the authority of the Queen. The puppet King of Delhibas terminated a four months’ inglorious reign _by decamping in female costume, with the whole of his family, and for the present wanders among dispirited followers, to be ' captured at a future day, unless his sanguinary people should do summary justice by revenging themselves for their disap- | pointment by slaughtering the idol they bad set up when their prospects appeared to be good of driving Europeans | out of the country. The assault upon Delhi was commenced on the 14th ult., in four columns, one of which, consisting of the Cashmere Contingent, which the late Gholab Singh despatched to the assistance of the besiegers, was repulsed. The other columns were successful, and an entrance was first effected by the brave soldiers whose point of attack was the Cashmere Gate, on the north front of the city nearest to the river Jumna. Having effected the breach, the storming party entered the city, and advanced westward along the ramparts j to the Shah bastion, and thenee to co-operate with another column that had stormed the Cabul Gate. The resistance upon the ramparts appears to have been obstinate; and of a later generation, Quincy Adams, Otis. Ames, Story, fall in the price of the cotton of Carolina, the corn and wheat of| although the guns of the mutineers were quickly turued upon ‘Webster, bright names on the roll of honor—arise in visible procession before us, to bear witness to the glories of the public omen of this Commonwealth and of the American Union : and /that here * expressive silence’? may muse their praise more eloquently than lips of living man. But “ onr country,’* with its science and its art, its moral and material greatness and glory,—our country is cherished by all | i's Sons, even amid their occasional complaints of its public | policy, of its laws and of one another; it demands and receives | | our filial reverence and admiration in the times of its prosperity, | and in those of its adversity our devotion to the last drop of | blood which beats in our hearts ; and of the glories of our com. | mon country, the united thirty-two States, not a part, but each | land al! of them—wha may not and will not speak ? Our country in its material interests stands on the stable | tripod of agneultare, artand commerce. Its natural productions | of land and Sea. its pastures, forests and cultivated fields, its | mines and its fisherins, constitute the primary elementof its | | weaith and strength, Science and art come next, the inventive | | thought, the all-conquering labor, applied to the cultivation and | | expforation of natural products, and to the modification of them | for the convenience and use of man ; whether in the production } and preparation of animal substances for his food, shelter, or ,Clothing.—in the skiil whieh shapes the metal and the wood, the fibre of cotton or wool, into such diversitied objecis ot | manufyciure,—which elabucates matter os with a creator’s | | builds the steam-engine, the railway and the telegraph,—or | _whieh embodies the inspirations of genius in the sublime and beautiful forms of painting, sculpture and architecture. And | then comes commerce to cannect all thes? things, to exchange | them, to traverse earth and Sea, river and lake, transporiing the fruits of industry and art from one Siate to another, and from nation to nation, under the safeguard of the constitutional power of the Union. Jn the harmonicus combination of all | these interests, in their consentaneons development and parailel advancement. | repeat, consists the industrial prosperity of our | country. We cannot fail to refleet on this—it is impossible not t) eee )and, with it, cessation of manufactures, and decline of the products of agriculture, which for the moment pervades the United States. We have hefore us the spectacle--t'e un‘que and extraordi- [commerce as well as of blood :—I say to Engiand.-—do not ‘troubles, political and financial, which, from time to time, in ! : jthe vivaciousness of our nationality, flit across its face like | force of constitution. Hlinors, or the freights and manufactures of Massachusetts ; and their folhes have had no appreciable inflaence in producing the actual brenk down of the credit system of the United States. At such a time as this, at any rate, when so many thousands of industrious men and women in Massachusetts are deprived of occupation and of means of support, by the curtailment or suspension of work in the great manufactories of the State, although for them retrenchment is a necessity as wel) as duty, yet it is not so for those, who, with wealth, possess assured means of subsistence. Why shonld they retrench, when every article they consume is of diminished price? It would be es- pecially unwise for them to do so, at a time when every item of personal expenditure which they may cut off wiil but serve to aggravate existing evils, by contributing to impede the cir- culation of money, by mereasing the superabundance of unem- ployed labor, and by multiplying the canses of poverty and erime, and in the long run subject them to larger expenditures (of alms-giving and taxation. Atatime like this, in France, for instance, there would be éuccor to labor by great public works of the government, such asthe addition of a new quadrangle to the Louvre or the Tuileries. We cannot tn this way combat the effects of a stricture, as itis called, im the money market. But we can, so | far as We possess the means, continue our accustomed train of life ; persevere tn wel'-devised and well directed enterprises ; keep, so far ag possible, our ships and our looms im action ; preserve, unmoved, the great landmarks of our industria! pros- perity ; and stand ready to start anew, when the proper tune comes, as come It soon must, al! the great movements of produc uion and commerce througbout the Commoawealth, I say, in the first place, to Europe. and especially to England, —England sometimes fretting at us with lithe cause, and some- times fretted at by us, but always nearest to usin relations of isnffer yourself to be deluded by the habit which prevails in the Unired Sates, of monstrously exaggerating all the transitory shadows and so depart. ‘The United States are not, hke noble but unfortunate Spain—borne down by the accumulated load of of Netions,”’ mouraing over the irreparable loss of the Nether them, they fought with desperation, contesting every foot of ground with their persevering and still more resolute oppo- nents. Krom the Cashmere Gate the street leading to the magazine and the King’s palace is narrow and intricate, whilst from the Cabul Gate the opening to the palace along the canal is broad, with but little to impede the soldiers’ pro- gress. It was in passing from the former point that the strongest resistance was offered, for it took two days to gain the magazine, and four days more before the whole of the city was in our possession. The King and his family eseapetl across the bridge of boats; but large numbers of the muti- neers must have been intercepted and debarred from following the royal example when the victorious army had fought their way to the palace, and cut off that means of flight, Although many escaped, no doubt, by the southern and westein gates, the small number of the British being insufficient to invest the city, some thousands must have fallen under the bayo- nets of the avenging army in the first moments of victory. We have on our side a serious list of killed and wounded, which enables us to judge, with some degree of accuracy, the uumber of the enemy slain. The British loss was 600 men, including 50 officers, It is a great success, accomplished without the aid of a single man direct from Kugland. The relative strength of the forces is not correctly ascertained ; but the mutineers in possession of Delhi are considered to have been nearly three times as many us the besiegers, and the weight of metal of their gans even in the same proportion. The event, there- fore, may well be described as one of the greatest that have oceurred in the history of a cou..try so remarkable for bring- ing out the heroism of British soldiers, and so fertile of great achievements ; andthe namesof Wilson and Nicholson, leaders of the band of heroes by whom the eapture of Delhi has been effected, will stand among the highest which Fame has written on the Indian page of the history of the British dominions, The brilliant mapper in which this new Scbas- topol has been reduced, must remove any doubis that were ‘Tands, of Italy and°the Indies. Our young strength is able to | lnspired during the operation against the Russian Sebastopol, throw off at will its maladies, either of atony or fever, by mere | of the military genius and skill of this couutvy. What we Nor 18 the peopie of the United States | could not do very effectively in conjunction with others, is nary spectacle—of the gallant vessel of our domestic credit Wke that of Mexico, reduced to imbecility and to anarchy, by | done marvellously well single-handed. system going down, down into the ocean depths, without any | 24«xture of the inferior blood of emancipated Africans or storm of public calamity to cause it, with sails set, pennons | Indian races, so as to le down in the despair of helpless poverty streaming to auspicious breezes, and floating along as fair and | °" the very silver rocks of euntganey and Zacatecas. Not in smooth a sea as ever rippled and glittered to the sunlight on | UT hands will Califorwia hold its golien stores shut up in the the bright shores of the Cyclades. All domestic commerce is unexplored treastire-chambers of the Sierra Nevada, | repeat. paralyzed ;—the ship-yards of Boston and Newburyport are be nor deluded into the imagination that a blight has fallen upon deserted, the mills of Lowell, Lawrence and Holyoke are at a | ‘his country, as you inistakenly supoosed ata firmer time, when stand, the busy hum of labor no longer fills the workshops of | Ptyments did not punctoally arr e on the bonds of Pennsyivania. Worcester and Springfield, and a winter of labor unemployed | I say, in the second place, to the many good honorable and appears to be setiling duwn like a dark cloud on the industry | honoreu merchants and others of the United States, who have of Massachusetts. That—the multitude of persons deprived | been doomed to see the commercial credit of a long life-time of empioymen!—is the grave, the sorrowful, the alarming | fail on the instant, and the great and useful ondertakings con- | to us all at the present crisis. What are we to do, is; the | their fellow-men depended, arrested or crnshed,—TI say to them universal question, to avert evil, to diminish suffering, ta restore |—You have the cordial sympathy, the unimpaired, nay the the usual course of aff:irs? Permit me, Mr. President, not so jaugmented, respect of your fellow-citizens. You, the great | aspect of things, which is of peculiar and paramount interest | ducted by them, and on which the happiness of thousands of | There is reason also to believe that Lucknow is recovered. |The garrison had received supplies enough for its support until the Ist of October; and we have information’ that on ‘the idth of September General Outram, with Her Majesty's | Sth and 90th regiments, and detachments of the G4ih, 75th and 84th, and some companies of artiliery, reached Cawn- pore; and having effected a junction with the forces of Gen. | Havelock, the Ganges was crossed on the 19h, and a rapid }march was commenced on the road to Lucknow, where all | was known to be safe on the 16:h. The be-iegers, however, /couscious of what was going on, were using every means in their power against the place, and a numerous army has en- | trenched itself between Cawnpore and Lucknow, about 16 ‘miles from the former place, to obstruct the progress of the OTS suitable for Villa Residences, situate on the western much to attempt to answer exhaustively this general question, | merchants, manufacturers, publishers, and bankers of Philade!-/ relieving force. The little army of Havelock and Outram moiety of *‘ Spring Park’’ Estate—within a few minutes as to make two or three pertinent suggestions on the sabject, | phis, New York and Boston, are embarrassed--not by reason walk-ofthe Province Building. For further particulars, plan, | with special reference to objects naturally suggested by the | of special fau'ts of yours, but of the inherent defects of the .&e., apply te Tuzo. Desprisay, or to the subscriber, May 18, 1857. pee Aa “Valuable Farm in the Royalty of Charlottetown. HE SUBSCRIBER offers for SALE, a FARM of about Forty Acres of very Valuable Land, situate in the Royalty of Charlottetown, and is | the distance of about two miles from the City. This | Fropery fronts nearly 30 chains on the St. Peter’s Road, and | about 15 chains on the Union Road, and adjoins the valuable | Farm of the Hon. George Coles. ‘The greater portion of the Land has been recently cleared. .For particulars, apply to _ June A rf W.-H. POPE. | Valuable Leasehold Property for Sale. (EVHE undersigned offers for sale his FARM at Barrett's Cross, Lot 19, containing 114 acres of excellent Land, at the an- nual rent of Is. per acre, for 999 years; forty acres of which are under a high state of cultivation, and the remainder is covered with the hest quality of hardwood timber and fencing poles. It hes a front of nineteen ehains on the Main Western wad Bedeque Road, and is within nine miles of the flourishing Town of Sammerside. There are on the premises avery ex- cellent DWELLING-HOUSE, together with a DISTILLERY, CUACH-HOUSE, STABLES, &c., two excellent Wells of water are within a few yards of the door, and every other ac- commodation besides. A portion of the purchase money may remain on interest for such time as may be agreed on. , Barrett's Cross, Lot 19, Oct. 5. _ tf PETER MULLIN. For Sale or to Let, oa DEVENPORT COTTAGE AND GROUNDS, ITE Subscriber being desirous of removing into Town, offers for SALE or to LET, the abore named property where he now resides. This property is prettily. situated, and is only about.one mile from the centre of the City. The COTTAGE contains eight well-finished rooms, anda large pantry, besides a kitchen, laundry, and two rooms for servants. BARNS, STABLES, Coach House, and other Out-Buildings are in goed repair, and are convenient and commodious. A Well of excellent Water is within a few yards of the kiteben door. The LAND eonsists of THREE PASTURE LOTS, of which from 6 to 12 Acres will be sold or leased with the House and Buildings. Por Terms, and further particulars, apply to the Subscriber. July 6, 1857. G. W. DEBLOTS. exhibition of this great and useful Association. | To begin, lL apprebend that a little too much stress may be | | laid, forthe time, on the duty of retrenchment and economy, or, {at least, that the admonitions on that subject are somewhat | “tore indiscriminate and comprehensive than is called for by the ,exigencies of the occasion, or the public good. Certainly, |every prudent man should live.within his income, with due | /regard to economy for the future needs of himseif and ms) family. That is not an obligation of this day only, but of all | days. [ doubt whether, in the palmiest hours of posi prosperity, it has been neglected by us, any more than universally happens in all human society, in the sane circumstances. It is to be} remembered that the natural resources of this country, and the | consequent relative results of industry in it are enormous— beyond those of any other part of the world; that no such system of trade and banking, and the mismanagement of that system at the great centre of the commerce and exchanges of | the United States. You are the martyrs of the principle of | commercial honor. You have fallen, only because you stood | in the front, and thus against you were struck the wild blows of | our credit sysiem strugg!ing in its death agony. Be of good | cheer. You need not say with Francis at Pavia, — Tout est, \is small in comparison ; but we have no doubt of receiving a | good account of its dealing with the foe, and of its having forced a way through this formidable obstacle to the walls of Lucknow, where many of our countrywomen bave so long been in peril, with a horde of human tigers prowling round them, intent upon repeating the nameless atrocities of Cawnpore. With the fall of Delhi and the relief of Lucknow, the perdu fors V honneur—but rather, that nothing is lost, now you! rebellion will not be ended. The neck of it will be broken ; retain Untarp shed honor. Finally, to those who have weathered the gale in safety, I say, lec no narrowly and timidly selfish calealations govern your conduct. If straightened by temporary privation of labor, be prudent, be temperate, be patiently hopeful of speedily return- ing prosperity ; for the productive resources of the country, tts agriculture, its mineral wealth. its commercial advantages, the impediments to successful industry exist here as elsewhere : j strength and skiil of its inhabitants, —all these are unscathed ‘that we are exempt from nations] famines, exhausting wars, and | and untouched by the storm. If wealthy, show that wealth has the capricious extravagance of regalor unperial despotism ; and | its courage, not less than its fears. Long enongh have we re- that hence, as a geveral rule, there is more of wide-spread and | cently been trying in this country to see how much and how universally diffused competency among us than in most o:her | causelessly we could hate one another. (Let us change all that countries, and more of consequent capacity to live well, dress/toa policy, [ ought rather to say, to a religion, of reciprocal | well, build well,and participate freely in all the materia! comforts | support and Jove. Let not those of less favored worldly con- of civillization. ‘That is the distinctive fact in the condition of | dition among us have cause to murmur at the unequal dispen the United States. To what end are all its advantages, if they sation of the blessings of Providence. | well know, indeed, /may not-be enjoyed by us, in temperance and in reason? In that the charity of Massachusetts is open-handed, bounteous, seeking to better our condition, and to enjoy its fruits, we do but | inexhaustible. yield to irresponsible instincts of the beautiful and the good n> There is no winter in’t : an sutumn tis, our nature, and so worthily respond to the bounteousness of God. | That grows the more by reapiag. | [ doubt, therefore, at any rate in the breadth of its ordinary For the sorrows and sufferings of the poor, in the inclement statement, the truth of the current doctrine of assumed profusion | geason which is near at band, let us ali be prepared, and each, —— | of living as the evil of the times, or contrasted retrenchment 48 | jn our respective spheres of action. emulate the high example, jits remedy. I think both the evil itself, and its remedy, he and practice the holy uses of this the “ Charnable Mechanic deeper in other causes and acts, which it would be out of place | \gsociation.”’ to attempt to unfold here at the festive board. For example, it is quite common to assail the ladies, and to! Tur Livexroot Borovcn Baxk.— Arrangements have ridicule and reprosch their taste of dress, personal ornament, been made, and will immediately be completed with the and custom of |ife, as one of the responsible causes of the present’ Bank of Eng'and, for an advance, whick will enable the ‘ commercial crisis. I utterly deny this. 1 would like to break | Borough Bank to open and discharge all liabilities. On i ' but it has a hundred arms, with more or less vitality in thei, and which will give employment to British troops for a long time to come. The whole of Central India, for more than a _thousafid miles, from Jondpore on the West to Assam on the Jast, is in a disturbed state. Rajpootana, which contains the most warlike race in India, with the exception of the | Sikhs, is full of rebels. In Scinde, which is occupied by Bombay regiments, there have been attempts at revolt at Kurachee on the sea coast, at Hyderabad in the centre, and at Shikapore on the north towards the Punjaub, the insur- rectionary movement, however, being very promptly sup- pressed. The telegraph communication has been cut off by the mutineers of Ramghur in Behar. The Dinapore muti- neers (who should never have been allowed to get loose) have gone up the country to Nagode, where they persuaded the 20th Native Infantry to mutiny, and one of the despatches |speaks of Sangor and Jubbalpore as being threatened by this gapg uuder the leadership of Koor Singh, to whom the troops uf the Rajah of Rewah had fied, the Rajab himself having ina panic placed himself under British protection. At Ahmedabad, the ringleaders of an attempted mutiny among |the 2d Bombay Grevadiers bad been seized and executed. ‘The news of the extension of the mutiny is not worse than was apprehended, Indeed, it is almost marvellous, sceing the overwhelming numbers of the mutinously disposed, that the rcvellion is not universal. TT» the firmness of the British soldiers at every point the preservation of the country is 8 lance with any gentleman in that quarrel. 1 wil: go farther; | Wednesday, the following notice was posted on the outside of owing. Never were laurels better earned than those which ; : ' * > 7 ’ a % 2 “ : *,* . ° . ° apd run tho risk of paradox, io saying shet_in my Jotgmeot ts ‘the Borough Bank :—“ The arrangement with the Bank of are universally acveded to British soldiers in Lidia. prevailing female costume is not only graceful, but, relatively | ™" ; , ‘to other fashions which have preceded Sediventtar. and there- England not having yet been completed, the business of the | fore justified by considerations of utility as well as beauty. |bauk will not be resumed until further notice.” | The matiny is now resolved tuto brigandage, the mutineers j have no stronghold, and can live only ov pluuder. The most i i } samen . % a *