onde oth ie The Examiner. Nor ia even this all; in previous | particulars of ber having been off that place, which is a @eii at ris own price. yeats the & sue at allowed the unfortanate farmers to! noted slave station. Having ascertained next morning that| seers and Clérks) are safe. vet off the amount @ue to them for tobacco against what was|q vessel had shipped slaves the previous afternoon, he pro-jnot Ueen fotiad, and it is supposed lie due from them for taxcs; but, rendered perfectly desperate | eeeded agdin in chase of the brigantine, and ¢athe up with | ruins. be the want of mofiey, it will not now pe rmit this to be done fer at 20 a.m. Septembet IGith. au¥ loaget. it is accordingly fotcing the tobacco producers | ) a of the Cortitat of Debdreezin, to Which it is largely indebted, | the person stippbdsed io be the mast@r of the vessel; who said | nised by frietids. to pay up their taxes to the last farthing, ar d is cagsing the that he had m0 papers, directed the hatches to be opened, | niture se who ciunot pay to be sold by | wh auction. You will hatdly be'ietve that su h things can be, they are truc.’ furnifure and stock of th jim heaps, naked, regardless of set or age. At the Satiie time | itwo or three of thé dlatet’s crew naked to the waist, ad begrimtmed with the blood of the | wretebed black#, #honi tKey Gruelly lashed into keeping | sileace, looking ta every respect petfect demoné. Toe flag that she wnwdtrantably had laid claiar to, was hauled down by ae of ber oft! crew, aud the Hritish ran dp, amidst the THA AUSTRIAN NATIONAL LOAN. The Imperial Law Gazette pu lishes a decree ordering pert the parment of the interest of the N tional Loan, fallidy due paym f the é ‘ fer the Ist of January next, to We effected in silver Miter wu s furmerly : hearty cheers and joyful shouts ef the rescued Africans. THE CONGHESS. ' The vessel ¥as fouud to coutain 500 slaves, aud was taken : ee . in tow to Whydal, atid despatched next day to Sierra Leone, The adhesions of Rome and Naples to the Congress have vith the slaves all healthy, for aljadicatiod in the Prize arriveu Nay les wills nd two PI uip ten tiartes. All the Court at that place. Powers invited to the Co gress have nOwW Sent it their ad- ates :, — } hesion, The Pays adds:—” The ( dngfess is now constituted : . in principle. The tinguimods adhesion to it proves that Late English New S. Europe knows how t appreciate and ackn wle Ige the éner- ieee re tie arid ! yyal policy of the uy ror, aud allows us to pre- | DEATH OF LORD MACAULAY. save a Satisfattery solution of th difficulties of the Italian GI Into heer tent night 06 ieeahaibiiidemssnen question.” sret that Boglitd bad suffered an irreparable loss by th: sudden death bf Lord Macaulay, at bis residence in Kensing- lon, at 8 o'clock on Weduesday evening. Although in 1802 ve had a serious and protracted illness, from declared disease if the heart, the attack was subdued, and til] within the last | three weeks bis health was tolerably good. Abouta fortnight since he bad a second attack, from which, however, he CHINA. Ode advices from Hong-Kong are to the 29th October. The following is from the samwary of the Chtaa Mail :-- A portion of the @7th Regiment has come up here frow Caleutt » atid tHe 8rd Buffs are daily expected from the sam® pltve; it having been supposed rallied, and his medical advisers cousidered him out of im- that Shanghae was tn carger ut ye tine ag! a: Oa aodione danger, Up to the end of lest week be eoutioued It is sdid ttat & reetnt survey of (ue mouta of the Peiho li amend, but 2 relapse teok place. und terainstel fatal y oe.8 } ; ao 2a } | . > iskl ose 2t ldrge Vessels ¢ nove in very close to the : , ligklosed thet large Vessels can ’ ) Lord Macaulay was never married, and the title des with « Kverythieg remains dull. dreds of wretched btitian beings, who were hudJled together | to their homes, lesptd out of the hold, ! and, thinking thers was ud prospect of being extricate Sete * if directions come out {or the destruction of the tim. seta eee situation. "ih is thought that the ship was lost either on the Varue or the Ridge, two shoals which stand in the centfe of! the Channel, almost in a line with Folkestone and Cape Uunes The Varue extends some four or five miles ia length, extremely burrow, and hos not more than 8 fathom aud a half wpon it at low water, while all around it are soundings | ut 12 and 27 fatnoms. ‘he Ridge is nearer to the French | coast—a long avd nurrow shoal, and, hke the Varue, bas, deep water round it. ‘The —. ee Is, that the ship atrack upon one of these shoals, and, «!t-r beavy beat. ; a fan “ to dom, aud, sliding off, suck in toy oni OF LIFE. It may be stated that sie was fitted with ample boats to, LaWRENCS, Maes., January 10, 11 p- m. About 10 save ail hands ; but, in such a sea that prevailed that night, | minutes to 5 o'clock, this afternoon, our citizens were a'arim- it is very doub:ful whether they could have outlived it. ed by the ery of firey which proceeded from the Pembertou Several luggers reached Ramsgate, Dover and Folkestone, Milis, about four-fifths of which bad fallen, a shapeless mass, with portions of the cargo of the Blervie Castle; some of it without the slightest warning to the 800 buman beings who was picked up in the evurse of Thursday, as far to the east-| were then at work, ward as Galloper Light, off Harwich. ‘he loss of the ship| At present it is impossible to give anything like a correct and cargo is estimated at least at £30,000, account of the loss of life, but from the best authurity, it is : : ss -beleved that at Jeast two hundred ure dead in the ruins. oo ee ; | be building bad uever deen considered as staunch as it CAPTURE OF A SL \S BR.—INUU MAN CONDUCT ought to cael aloe it was built about seven yeais siuce, OF THk 3LAVER’S CREW. and was theu thuagit a sham ; indeed, befure the machinery ‘Ono the 22ud Sept., as her Majesty's ship Spitfire w.s was put in, the wails spread to such a degree that some 22 steaming to windward, a brigantine, suspected of being en- tous of iron stays were put in to save the building froin fall- geged in the slave trade, was met of Aghway, Bight of Img by its own weight, Benin, running to leeward, which shortly afterwards anchor-| ‘The buiiding appeared from the best information that can ed of Whydah, a noted slave depot, at which place her vow be gathered, to crumble aud fall from the easter coruer Majesty's ship Spitfire likewise anchored. For three days| or end, wards the Duck Mill, Lt fell inwards, as if power- the suspected vessel remained there, pretending to discharge | fully drawn that way. The fire companies at ouce repaired plank end other eurgo. Oa Sunday forencon, Sept. 25, tue | to the spot, but tere being no fire, they at once set to work weather being thick and squally, the brigantine left Why- to remove the rubbish, They very soou reached some of dat and rau to leeward. Desiring not to lose sizht of her, the rooms, so that the dead and wouuded were taken out as the Spitfire steamed in the same direction that afiernoon, tast as they could be reached. by which the town was completely Hooged, anu wucn pro- perty destroyed, Lt is stated that about 47 houses and 147 shops baYe been undermncd and fell, and tour men, 11 women and 1 child perished beneath the ruins. Upwards ot 100 mulee airo perished, REESE ae UNITED STATES. APVALLING ACCIDENT AND TERRIBLE L033 = ————_——_— — He was only 59 years of age.—Daily News, Dec. 3v. Messre: (ast, Clark, Tatterson, Melvin dud Winn ( Mr. Branch, an overseer, Liect, Chaptttan byatded| ‘The Mity Hall bas been converted into a temporary hospi- | ow we in perser’, dnd not being satisfied with thé arisWers giveti by ital for the dead and wounded, to retain there until recog-| Se hh j States, } Woutided, ate re‘! native of British North America, was plaved in ¢ommand. henee issued immediately the fraritit cties of stiffing bun- |cognised when taken from thé ruins, and immediately taken She was immediately rin before the wind, all sail set, and ‘when well clear of the barque, was headed to the Westward. Scores of both dead and mangled, an. Mr. Palofer was dvept? Duridd id the ruins at the time, | ted, and lited some tine after arriving at the Hall, window, dud theu jumped out herself, breaking au arm aud otherwisé injuring herself so that she cannot recover. The laboring force of the mil}! was about 96U, and it is supposed that about 700 beings were actually buried in the | ruins, 11 30 p. m. ‘rom whetice she was extricated, stil] alive One poor girl lies in the [all badly burt, attended by her mother. She had only entered the mil) the day previous. An engine has just arrived from Manchester, bringing, ‘our more physicians. oS Tue entire Rotye i Fsames!—About half-past nine | v’clock fire was diseovered, ‘This additional horror, although | somewhat apprehended, struck terror to hearts that had | aeretofore becn hopeful of saving more lives. Still i work of removal weut briskly of. Mipsieitr.—Calamity succeeds calamity! Within the | vast teu minutes the whole mass_o! ruius has became one | sheet of flame! The screams and moanings of the poor, buried, burning, and suffocating creatures can be diatiuetly heard, but no power on earth can save them. Half-past ove e’elock.—Tbe Pemberton Mills are now a | 4.%¢ crac. Vine wwenee i bones are promiscuously mingled, | wo hundred bumau beiugs perish- | tk, burning not only the buiidings, sading to the material that had in ‘thing is being done there that can | verty or lite. resent from Methuen, Audover, | Lowell. hysicians are in attendance at the | 2s, wherever the injured need their 4 up, it will be many days before! iumber of killed and wounded cau sacrificed the burled human beings, | rom a lanteru containing burning | ly dropped. down dead in the street, probab! | r-exertion. His name is unknown. | ug Llouses, in which near)y all the} boarded, were at one time in great | ition, but are now safe, ty, from one end to the other, are human be ngs, every ove eager to | way or sliape, and all anxious tr rauspire, ves, wh) were alternating, previous > flames, between hope and fear, are eless despair. uld uo Jeuger ho!d supremacy. + ee 7 ENTURES ON TUE VOYAGE i WANDERER, ver, between 9 and 10 o'clock, Lin- issumed tame of Divid Martio, put) yacht. Waladerer, the» lying in the | 0 assist im taking aboard provisions, | ttle Jate@-Be came on board himself, d Talbot, and Uapt. J. Black, ship- | } all bawds to get under way, and | we he would shoot the first one who. might interrupt his movements. He | ppiug agent and pilot with death if 2 the vessel. Some of the crew who the two guns with grape, and armed s orders against those who had been | @ to come ou board. vilot on board, he directed the move- | nself, and got her twice ashore. At Light, and anchored, when the pilot ft her. ‘Again she ran azround, and hours. At vine o'vlock in the morn- | > floated again, made sail, slipped and went to sea, Car:ying more than eir wishes, ay their, fears, pretended that the atanzas and Nassau, N. P., and back days afterwards be declared the ship Collector having refused her a clear- s bound to the Western Islands for | ter, and theuce to the Coast of Africa udred negroes. to land at Cardenas, saying that he | for them $6.0 each, being well ac- | +, having landed several cargoes from | cean Tyrant, brig Frances Killen, am rther informed them that on leaving , to procute a chronometer, charts, or | conseq ieatly would have to perioum | soning. ober, however, he fell in with the ship | ought from her one Epitome, Blunt’s | t of the Gulf of Florida, for which be | ' next chased the barque Clara Brewer, | er, findivg the captain to be an old ot go on board. wa echoouer and made sail in chase, ; Of canvass that he carried away his it the sail, but failed to overhaul ber. . : ver he chased a brig and fired at her. | but she would not heave to; the chase was continued until Ll p. m., when the biig favored by the darkness of the night, by suddenly changing her course, ran out of sight. The Wanderer was vow headed for Fayal, and was favored with a strong gale from N. N. W., going sometimes twenty knots an hour, and requiring two men at the helm to steer her, Qn the 3ist the gale moderated to fine weather, which continued uatil November 9th,when she encountered another North-west gule, which brought her to the Isles of Flores. She stood off, and on firing guns for a pilot, and when off the settlement of Santa Cruz, the British Consul, the Chief Magistrate of the place and pilet, came on board. She was then anchored im twenty-five fathoms water. ‘The captain produced a fulse clearance of the vessel, under the name of the * William, of Savannah, bound to Smyrna,” stating at the same time that he bad lost sails, provisiors, spars, galiey, and chronometer, and was in want of all these. Endorsed by the British Cousul and the authorities ashore, he procured thirty-eight casks containing about 4000 ga!'ons of water, firewood, liquor, flour, rope. 25U bushels of potatoes, | ao anchor, and 150 tathoms of chain. He was promised twenty tons more flour, but some of h’s movements exciting suspicion, he came on board in great baste, aud made everything ready for getting under weigh. that night. Le smuggled two Portuguese women on board, and this circumstance came to the knowledge of the authori- ties. He had not a momeut to spare, so he slipped sixty | fathoms of cable, left one of his men ashore, and did not pay over- | shased without being able to bring them to. At last she fell has ‘in with the barque Tetiuey, of Marseillés, #hich hove to, and is still duder the! pro:tised to give bim some of her stotes. fout mei he boarded her. i, cut | saw lying in a Cove a suspicious looking polacre brig, which his own throat to ead hid sdfferings ; but still be was extrica- | fired a gun when the Wan lerer hove ia sight. Having no desire to ascertain her true character, the Wanderer pursued Une wotnmao in the part of the mill sanding became her course to the westward without any other incident worthy | frightened, threw ker bonnet and shawl! out of a fifth story of She has now on board ten men and the A woman has just been rescued who says as the vessel was without papets, i#-aed an order for her here are some twenty-five more in the viciuity of the place seizure until the matter could be iuvestigated in the U. S. | death for the murder of Lane, and who was proved to bs a lu- | and sentenced to imprisonment for a term of years; but the | vernor to have him released trom prison, in order to save his jlife. The Governor, yielding to the solicitations on behalf of | poor tenantry from the payment of back rents, and ty sell to | farmers their several buildings at lower pricea than were put ,under the tender mercy of the Colunial Secretary as their ‘the Sheriff, with writs of distraint in Lis pocket, and an at- when the members of the ‘* Alliance’’ please, ~and the ‘of the Legislative Couneil,’’ referred to by Mr. Palmer, it With a boat and Now was the crisis of thé crew's fate. They determined. {o seize the vessel and carry ber to the United With that object itt view, Mr. Henry Welton, a {he next day she trade the westward of the Canaries and notice, She made Fire Island Light, thence proeeeled to tter-| paulin Cove, and arrived at Boston on the 24th December. two Vortuguese women already noticed, Mr. Welton proceeded at once to notify the Collector, who, Courts. She vow lies at anckor in the stream off the end of India wharf, near South Boston Flats.— Boston paper. ——e Correspondence. MISREPRESENTATIONS ON THE LIBERAL GOVERN=' MENT. To tux Eprror or THe ExamMInen. Sin—The Is/ander of the 6th inetant, for want of argument to convince the country of the great services rendered by the present Guveroment, attempts to vilify the character of our late worthy and esteemed Governor Sir D. Daly and his ad- visers ; but the seurrility ef the Js/ander will be more injuri- ous to its unscrupulous editor, in the estimation of all right- thinking men, than to the objects of his abuse. The charge against Sir Dominick for exercising the roya} ekemency in mi- tigating sentences passed by the Supteme Court, and * letting at large disturbers of the publie peace,” is a wiiful misoon- struction put upon his acts. The only cases in which Sir D. Daly interfered with the administration of justice are the fol- The first wae that of the mau who was sentenced to lowing. natic. The Governor at first refused to mitigate his sentence, but the Judges recomntertded Him to do so, as the Court bad nv alternative but to sentence him in aceurdance with the verdict, and as there was no doubt of his im-anity. To prevent, therefore, a judicial murder, the Governor commuted the sen tence of the maniac to imprisonment for life.—Tbe other case was that of Burke, who was found guilty of manslaughter, man’s health being in a declining state, as shown by the me- dical certificates, repeated applications were made tv the Go- Burke, commuted his sentence tu banishment frow the Island, and he was put in custody uf an officer of the Court until he was removed out of the Colony. Now, Sir, if the present Governor commits no greater error than in dealing oat mercy under similar circumstances, should they oceur in his time, I hupe the Tury party will be a little more sparing of their slander and abuse than they have been with respect to his predecessors. Instead of the Government promoting wise and bencticia! measures for the welfare of the country, as they promised to do, they appear to think that their whole duty consists in encouraging their Colonial Seere- tary to abuse, in the vilest manner, an absent Lieus. Gurernor for actions which were not only praiseworthy in themselves, but which were loudly ealled fur by public feeling and opin ion. Lot the Government organ desist for once trom its low personal abuse, and inform us what has become of that famous measure by which eur present ralers proposed to relieve the vn the Worrel estate lands? Sume portions of the tenantry Agent, have been honoured, | understand, with a visit from tempt was made to extract 40s. frum cach of them for new leases. Is this the right way to settle the Land Question and improve the eondition of the tenantry? The Colonia! Secretary bas alluded mere than once, in the official organ, tu the disinterestedness of the Executive Council in devoting their time gratuitously tv the public affairs; but the present year’s Almanack discloses a fine state of things, when it gives the names of no less than nearly six hundred per- sons who have been appointed to office by the Lory Goyermnent, and many of whom are near relations of members of the Exe- eutive Council, There is not much reason to praise the disin- terestedness of the Councillors when they can appoint to office | ~—as they haye done without much regard fur public opinion — their brothers, sons-in-law, cousins and partners, in whose aggrandisement they have a direct interest, and when it is very well known that the assumed Leader of the Government himself shares the emoluments of the Attorney General's office. The official calumniator of the Government should bear these facts in remembrance when he is again inclined to make falee and base assertions about the late Government, Yours respectfully, FAIR PLAY. January 10, 1860, Che Examiner. Charlottetown, P. E. I., January 24, 1860. THE LATE MEMBER FOR CHARLOTTETOWN. Tue report of Mr. Palmer's resignation of his seat in the House of Assembly, referred to in our iast No., has been fully confirmed over his own signature in a card addressed to his late constituents. He states, as a reason for the step taken by hm, that the Lieut. Governor has lately received instruc- tions ‘* to make an esssential alteration in the constitution of supporting the vicions policy of @ most unpopular Adminis- tration, may threaten to dissolve that branch of the Legislas ture, and appoint a new set of Councillors. Let them try ity if they dare. Mz. Dundas; backed as he it by the influence of Sir Samuel Cunard attd other absenttee pyprictors, has no power to attempt ahything of the kind. “he little conse- quential despots who sarround hie person and poison his ears, may talk of their importance and influence in he community ~—may prate of the neeessity which they say exets for remov- ing reftaetory menibets of the Legislative Couieil ; but we hope that Mr. Dundas has more common sense tlun he would show by Hetertitig to ewth suicidal advice. Shouil our hope, however, be unfounded, His Eacellency will be more the lubject of puttic connsisteration than reproach. In alluding to Mf: Palmer’s proposed elevation to the Council, the /slander indulget im @ etyke Of panegyric which is suprem “4 ridicusous frum the e#travag:nt falsehood of it. We are told that ‘* to no man im the Colony are our people more indebted for the political privileges which they enjoy than they are to Edward Palmer.” Such arrant bosh as this is scarcely worth the notice of any intelligent man; but we may venture to ask the panegyrist— (who has beconte so un- commonly polite of late days that he answere all our questions) —to define those great ** privileges’ fur which ourselves and our fellow colonists ase indebted to Mr. Palmer? Did he hel ‘lus to get self-Guverument—the most important of all—the advantages of which some of his friends are now enjoying im a material sense—and against which not one member of his Government now dare to raise his voice? No—Mr. Palner did not help us to obtain that * privilege ;" but opposed the’ people’s applicasion for it in every way, and attempted tu’ thwart their effurts on every side. Did he help to confer on our people the * privilege” of ‘ree trade with the United States, which has been the means of abolishing the old *- truck system,’’ and securing a ready and remunerating price for our agricultural] produce, making many of our farmers rich, and converting the fruite of the earth, as soon as they wefe taken from the ground, into so much gold and silver? Ny —but Mr. Palmet laboured to deny us this ‘* privilege,’’ assigning asa reason, that if we had free trade with the United States we would become republican in our ideas and habits. The sequel shows what a prophet be is. How did be demean himself in the gteaf stfuggle We have had to relieve our rising generation from the darkness and trammels of ignorance? ‘The Liberals proposed the free system of education—they cartied their object—the country has been prewd of it eter since, for its advantages are every where apparent. Mr. Palmer not only exhausted ia this Colony all his influence and energy iv opposition to that system, but he aided and encouraged an application to the throne to have it set aside. The Land Purchase Bill is a measure which has conferred great advantages er ** privileges’ on many of our fellow colonists. Mr. Palmer opposed it to the last; and now he is the leader of a Government which must continue to carry out its provisions. The settlement of the Land Question in every shape has invariably received his opposition ;-he hae set his face Against giving compensation to tenants for their improve- ments; he opposed the One-Ninth Bill, which has checked the exorbitant exactions of the Land Proprietors ;—he was @ fierce enemy to ths extension of the franchise ;—and he wee an adviser of Sir Donald Campbell when the old won ous despot devised the diabolical scheme of so changing the coneti+ tution that no leaseholders but those who possessed impfute« ments to thevalue of £300, and had twenty years possession, should have any yoice in the making of our laws—which scheme, if adopted, would place four-fifths of our popc] .tion in as low a condition as that of Russian serfs, Now, what are the * privileges’ whieh Mr. Palmer has laboured to obtain for his coontrymen doring bis twenty-fire years legislation? Will the Js/ander inform us of one? In offering these questions and remarks, we do not wish to find any fault with the Lieut. Governor in placing him in the Council. We shall miss him in the House of Assembly — there is no man able to take his place there—no man on his own side possesses a tithe of his debating qualities, his hardi- hood, pluck and persevorance ; but the Government will have more reason to lament his absence than the Opposition. He will, no doubt, be a very useful member in te Legislative Council ; but his usefulness will consist pretty much in re- lieving the Hon. Col. Swabey and other prominent members of the Council from doing the amiable in standing gudfather for the measures of the Government. The bonourable and Jearned gentleman is eminently worthy of the honour con- | ferred upon him; we congratolate him sincerely on his good stroke of political fortune. We have only one feeling in the matter, and that is respect to the Government, that he, with his talent fur debate and knowledge of public affsirs, should be considered as the only man fit to cope with the ** factious’’ Liberals of the Legislative Council. We understand that the Political Alliance have put forward Mr. George Bver as a candidate for Mr. Palmer's place ir the Assembly. It is probable the Alliance will be able to secure his distinguished services in the [louse. The ecleetors of Charlottetown, as a body of freemen, will not be allowed to have any say in the election. the Legislative Council,’’ and it being necessary for the Go- vernment to find a supporter in the Upper House possessed of | Parliamentary experience, he has expressed his willingness to | Mr. Palmer—ignoring the right of public take a seat there. opinion to pry into the secrets of the Executive—promises te explain everything to the Pulitical Alliance, which, appa- rently died since the last Election, has been resuscitated for the nonce. It appears that this secret oryanization—composed of a few simp'e-minded men in Charlottetown who call them- selves ** mercbants,’’ two or three fifth rate -lawyers, a few mechanics, labourers, and a sprinkling of shop boys—are to be the real rulers of the country, to whom public men shall be responsible—in whose hands the Executive of the day, with’ the Lieut. Governor at their head, must be tumbled and tossed about like nine pins, to be set up and thrown down country at large must submit to its dictation in all political affairs. If the country people and their representatives will submit to the usurpation of a contemptible faction, who, indi- vidually, have no influence, and no claim to much respecta- bility on the score of intelligence or anything elee—we hope the Political Alliance will become more powerful and arro- gant than they are at present; and the realization of this hope will be the heaviest punishment for the meanness and fully which seem to counsel submission to the eabai. With regard to the * essential alteration in the constitution has been whispered about by the leaky friends and supporters of the Government, that the number of members in that branch of the Legislature may be raised from twelve to fifteen —keeping up the usual and long established proportion of numbers in the Upper House to the Lower one. his is just Tux last No. of the paper styled the Protestant publishes some comments on the life and character of the late Right Rey. Dr. McDonald, over whom the grave has but just closed, and whose decease awakened such general sympathy in the breasts of ull right thinking Christiane who remembered the many virtues of his Lordship. We have no desire, as we re~ cently stated, to enter into a controversy with the Protestant on any subject. It may abuse the Catholic Church and ita members to any extent. The Church will be none the worse for the abuse, and the Catholics have too much good sense to ba put out of temper by the barking of such acur. But we leare to the Protestants of all denominations to say whether they approve of the conduct of a paper which professes to represent their religious views, in assailing the memory of a distinguish- ed ecclesiastic, whose life and conduct, according to its own testimony, was without reproach—whose charities were in- discriminate and bountiful; and who was, in every sense of the word, an exemplary Christian minister and a good mem- ber of society? We are far from thinking that any respec- table number of Protestants endorse the sentimenta of the un- christian attack on the late Bishop McDonald ; snd the person who gould pen the article muat be such a diagrace to our common humanity as to justify us in taking no further notice of him, *7-co+-- AN ADMISSION. We thank the official organ for answering our enquiry re- Specting the armoury lately rented by the G.vernment. It appears that the rent is to be £35, mstead of £75, fur the upper flat of a common warehouse, with s garret room attached — which must be cunsidered as a very heavy rent after all. one dollar for the supplies reeeived, valued at about fifteen “®t many int lligent Liberals wanted—what they would huudred dollars. He openly avowed to the crew that he have proposed two or three years ago, when they carried their could procure eighty negroes for the women he had kid- new Represeutation Bill; but as there appeared to be no ne- uapped, cessity at that time for an increase in the Upper House, and and Lieut. Chapman, having ascertained that she was anchor- | Mr. Cbus. Batcvelder helped to remove some 26 in various e) at Jackin, to which place the brigantine was said to have conditions. Sume still laviog—others dead and terrib! been bound, proceeded in chase, and came up with her | wutilated, 7 working off the land, on a wind,at 10 p.m. No satisfactory! Mr. Chase, the Agent. and Mr. Howe, the Treasurer answer be ng returned when bailed she was boarded, and proy- | were both providentiuily saved. They were ia the spiuuing- ed to be the suspected vessel. The boarding officers returned | room, conversing, when, being warned by some unusual noise apparently sutictied wits the result, and with the account giv-| both started for a dour whic was, by orders, strictly pro- eu by the person representing himself as the master of the hibited trom beag uaocked, but it being the only possible vessel. Notwithstanding all this, doubt as tu her uouesty | exit, they tried that and found 1t unaccountably open. They temained in Lieut. Chapman's mind, aud there being almost | wad no more than wade their escape when the part they had « calm, he decided om steaming back to Jackiv, to learu some! just left fell to the ground. Se ee ‘rhe vessel was next headed for Maderia, called at Village Point de Salee, but unable to obtain supplies, proceeded to Funchal, where receiving information tuat an Wnglish stea- knowing that if would add to the expense of legislation, the project was not generally entertained. Another question for the Is/ander, as our cotemporary ap- pears to be in the humour of answering us: Jlas not Mr, Lowe, the Superintendent of Public Works, been directed to fit up Mr. Pope's warehouse—(the one in question)—as 4 place for drill and an armoury stand ; and when the cost of that work be taken into account, how far short will the mer of war was in the harbor, he stuod out to sea, proposing Now, with Mr. Palmer in the Legislative Council, the Go- to pass between Cape St. Ann and the Canaries. _vernment have only three supporters. Let them add three dull short of provisions, he declared to the crew that he more—and that, we believe, will be developing their power would obtain them ty force from the first vessel he met, sta- to the fullest extent—the Liberals will still have nine out o! ting that be would shoot the first wan who hesitated to fi_ht es te h é6 chee, : vee the fifteen which will then compose the Council. Shortly afierwards he spoke the barque Clara, of Bor- | The Liberal members of the Council are not such fools as to deaux, but her commander positively retused either to heave beled astray by the bluster of the Government and its sup- to or to furnish him with supplies. Two other barques were Porters, who, with the view of intimidating the majority int. e ~ amount be of the £75 which we stated as the price of this job? The Islander attempts tu excuse the Government ex- penditure in this instance by saying, that the Barrack armoury was not asafe place for depositing the few rifles that have been lately received here—that it isdamp,&c. All we need say is, that ler Majesty's arms, to very considerable value, have been deposited there for half a century—that they never received any injury—were never stolen, wore never injured by damp, a Wis, ‘ Bas oetinns Cd