Vol. AV. Farm, Stock, Crop, Dwelling House, &c. &c. for Sale, HE subscriber being about to change his residence to Georgetown, will sell at PUBLIC AUCTION, on WEDNESDAY the loth November next, (if not previously sold by priv: eoutract), at the hour ef Ll o clock in the fore noon, on the Premises ot Hollow River, Lot 42 King’s County. the andermentioned Property, viz 3) ACRES OF LAND, well fenced and in a 4 ui atate Gi ealtivation, 40 acres having guder Crop this vear.a part of which Crop will be sold at the sume time ; the rewaining 10 acres are cavered Wiel bard and seft wood on the Premisesa DWELLING HOUSE R Literature, and olitics, “"EPhis is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, November 6, 1865, | 1425 PAIRS | POETRY, | Mens’, Womens’, Misses’ §- Childrens’ | ih THE MAGICAL ISLE. | INDIA RUBBER | Pant, eee : ‘ a a | There's a magical isle in the river of Time ‘ ‘ aK dS hil taeg a Sesiiee OVER SHO 4 So porte tone softest rr hoes are AaNe Alt 1¢ HIT 18 48 BWeel 48 A musical ¢ ile, Or the exquisite breath of a tropical elime, | FOR SALE VERY CHEAP AT THE t | When Jane with its roses is straying. P. E. ISLAND } j . . ‘ ott Boot & Shee Factory. Tis there Memory dwells with her pale golden hue, And music forever is flowing : dlews, -”°=--Euripides. SS Ne mello et the New Series.---No. 49. en) have never treated the prisoners they have my entire assent to this statement, as applied | lation. ; made, either by land or sea, as rebels and| to a large and too influential portion of Her | Pirates, but as pris jners of war, to be detained | Majesty's subjects ; if it has been my misfur- | anti! regularly exchanged. So much as to | tune to observe, in the presence of so won-| | the step which you say your government can, derful a revolution, a degree of coldness and | ‘never regard ‘ as otherwise than precipitate,’ | apathy prevailing in many quarters, from ‘of acknowledging the Southern States as) which my countrymen had every right to ex- | ibelligerents. It was, on the contrary, your) pect warm end earnest sympathy a ‘own government which, in assuming the throughout this great trial, the severity of | belligerent right of blockade, recognized the| which few not well versed in the nature of | {Southern States as belligerents. [Had they | our institutions could fully comprehend, the | not been belligerents, the armed ships of the | voice of encouragement from this side of the | United States would have had no right to! water has too often emitted a doubtful sound, | (stop a single British ship upon the high | I yet indulge the hope that the result arrived | | seas.’’ at will ultimately correct the hasty and harsh | wel! finished inside and out, 30 x 20 feet, feet post, with a good Well of Water at the door; end a BARN, Saished, 46 x 20 feet eal GEO. NICOLL. Charlottetown, Oct 9, 1865 fin | While the low murmured tones that come trembling f . . threush In the same communication Earl Russell, | /in allusion to Mr. Adams's admission that judgments that flowed from lack of faith | and of confidence in our fidelity to a righteous | Also the fellowing STOCK: | Horse, 7 years eld: t Mare, 3 years old; i double-seated Wagon, t Riding Sleigh; with Plough, Harrows, H and other Farming Implements Chis Property is admirably situated, being front ing the Sea, Where any quantity of is’) aud BM new. : . reams :—-For the Farm—one-half down, mainder in i2 months. For the Stock and $ mouths for any sum over £5, on upproved Joint X ites learned by application to the owner CAPT. HUGH McDONALD Hollow River, Oet. 9, 1865 can be camly obtained ne re roOn— e— AUCTIONEER, Commission Merchant, General Agent, BANK BUILDING, QUEEN STREET, Charlottetown, P. E. L. 12th Jane, 1865. ARCH’D. McNEILL, Auctioneer, Accountiunt, AND GENERAL AGENT. isl pro tf cw OF rIce— Reading Room Building, cp stairs | Charlottetown, P. E. Island. ~ F. P. NORTON, © Commission Merehant, AND Auctioneer. GEORGETOWN «--- P. E. ISLAND October 24,1864. Iy Acad. WILLIAM 8. MACGOWAN, Commission Merchant AND AUCTIONEER, SOURIS EAST. Souris, May 1, 1865. tf ROBERT L. WEATHERBE, Darrister L Attorney -at- Caw, Notary Public, Conveyancer, Ke. Office over Merchants’ Exchange, 156 Hollis Street, Halifax, N. 3. Sept 11,1865, 6m JOHN BELL, Merchant "Tailor, QUEEN STREET, CHARLOTTETOWN. July 24, 1865. ly Dr. FRANK D. BEER, Physician & Surgeon.) Surgery & Drug Store, KING SQUARE.... CHARLOTIELOWN. ee ee eS J, B, BLACK, M, D,, Physician & Surgeon, St. Eieanor's, Sept. 4, 1864.—-6me. DR. ©. L. STRICKLAND, of Baud.— Any other particulars inay be J. S. CARVELL, | P. E. Isiand. ; ier . «EN EN Sadly trouble the heart —and yet sweeten it too— i K iD ROS iD N IY Ol Ll, ! | As south winds o'er waters when blowing. There are shadowy halls in this fairy-like isle, Tn Store, and for Sale low, | Where pictures of beauty are gleaming: ae 2 Yet the light of their eyes and their sweet sunny (20 Bois. Kerosene Oil. | Only flash round the heart with a *wildering wile, sinile, o———— ALSO And leave us to know ‘tis but dreaming. _WHITE WINE VINEGAR, Retailing cheap for Cash. G. D. WRIGHT. i Kent Street, Oct. 9, 1865. h« wim | | | | And the name of this isle is the Beautiful Past, And we bury all our treasures there : | There are beings of beauty too lovely to last ; There are bosoms of snow with dust o’er them cast; There are tresses and ringlets of hair; é all Encourage Home Manufacture. | There are fragments of song only Memory sings; LADIES’ SILK HATS, | Latest Styles, Cheapest and Best, Be HO B BS’ ; een the dead, the bright, beautiful dead, tl ‘HAT and CAP FACTORY, With the soft flowing ringlets of gold; Opposite Temperance Hail. j J } GRATEFULLY acknowledges } . © the favors alre ady received, and | acquaints his friends and the pnblic at Jarge, that | he has FOR SALE, and is constantly making And the words of a dear mother’s prayer; | Theresa harp long unsw ept, and a late without strings; There are tlowers all withered; and letters and rings: Hallowed tokens that love used to wear. arise, Though their voices are hushed and o’er their sweet eyes The unbroken signet of silence now lies, Phey are with us again as of old. | itn the stillness of night, hands are beck ning us | Gent s Best Silk & Cloth HATS, | | And with joy that is almost a pai | __ WINTER & SUMMER CAPS, | we weight to urs tah 2.9 eseep T° 2 CL: 14ps |. Ladies’ Silk HATS § Skating CAI S, rhrovgh the shadowy halls of the island so fair, which he will seli at such prices as cannot fai to give satisfaction. Oct. IW. 1865. 6 Ins ' : cial | | there, We delight to turn back, and in wandering there, We behold our lost treasure again. In a vista unfadingly bright ; And the river of Time in i } Oh! this beautiful isle with its phantom-like show, y " . . NOTICE. eine os . ; T A MEETING of the President and | t Directors of the Summerside Bank, held this | lay, it was resolved a Call be made on the Stock | volders for 30 per cent of the subscribed Stock, to he paid on or before the first dav of DECEM BER wa tie Uris Base ti mig” Seles /GLEARINGS FROM LATE PAPERS, JOHN R. GARDINER, President. |e eee Sammerside, Oct. 2, 1865. till lat Dee. | DIPLOMATIC CORRESPONDENCR. Valuable & Desirable Building | The diplomatic correspondence on the a . > }claims presented by the American Govern- LOTS FOR SALE. }ment to that of Great Britain for the losses ts turbulent flow | Lz oft soothed by the voices we heard long ago, ivht When the years were a dream of del “ENSUE Subscriber offers for sale Two! indicted on American commerce by ren I erui- } Pleasantly situuted WATER L¢ /TSin George- | sers, fills three pages of the London Times of town, with Water Privilege to the channel. adjoin-| Qeg, 12th. The first communication, dated | ing the Common ut the eastern part of the Town i tT. 865. i M ‘ | Also. several BULLDING LOTS in different paris of | April 7th, 1865, is from Me. Adams. | Charlottetown | referrmg to the captures made and the out- jrages committed by the Shenandoah, that Minister proceeds to say :— Terms liberal GEORGE COLES. [S05 Charlottetown, 6th March | | | Te be sold by PRLVATE CONTRACT. that eligiblé LEASEHOLD PROFERTY, m Loti, known as ** MARSHFIELD, ' 260) Acres. more or less, of excellent Land, of | whieh aboat bo? are under cultivation, and the re- i mainaer, for the most part, covered with a vala | able growth of Firewood, S« autling and Fencing } Poles. The Dwelling House and Buildings are | my government cannot avoid entailing upon ; ; ’ ot ; lurge and commodivus, and the land is in excellent ithe government of Great Britain the respon. } condition. | : es via . X a ! lexms and further particulars made known on sibility iar this damage. It is im possi bi to j application to the Subscriber on the Premises, or |} 0€ insensidle to the injury that may yet be } to CHariks Parmer, Esq “a { impending from the part which the British : 1 K.P. HAYTHORNE. | steamer City of Richmond bas had in being ‘ fielk Tov. 28. 186 | 7 : a i Marshfield, Nov. 28, 1864. e soffered to transport with impunity from the =e TT ase ia f ot Pear : a i —s cr Phe lease is for 999 years, and the annual | port of London men and supplies, to place Orr Pree es SFR: ees } them on board of the French built steam ram ‘T.1 or 1 | Olinthe, alias Stoerkodder, alias Stonewall, Valuable Farm for Sale. | which has, through a entinuvusly fraudu- | ‘PXHE Subscriber offers for sale the | Governments of Europe, and in escaping | LEASEHOLD INTEREST of EIGHTY-ONE} from this hemisphere on its errand of mishief ACRES OF LAND, * oe | No. >, Foes jin the other. [am by no means insensible we nn mena patty Syme aeicitenda eau | to the efforts which bave already been made, passed in quantity and quality on the Lot. The jand are yet making, by Her Majesty’s goy- FARM embraces many conveniences that enhances | its value, and makes it attractive toa farmer. The Farm is situated on the Old Town Koad, within Majesty's kingdom and its dependencies to maintain and extend this systematic depre ple bad been materially relaxed or prevented, { should not be under the painful necessity ent process, succeeded in deluding several | this kingdom and its dependencies. Neither iere After | ** Were there any reason to believe that | : ; aa ae Valuable Farm for Sale, | the operations carried on in the ports of Her i coniaiping | dation upon the commerce of a friendly peo- | of announcing to your lordabip the fact that | ernment to put a stop to such outrages in | | Her Majesty’s government is actuated by a| ctuse. Of the friendly disposition in this re. | ‘friendly feeling towards the United States,|S¢t¢ of the members of ber Majesty 8 Go-| | says :— | vernment, and especially of your lordship, 1} « The question, then, really comes to this: | have never permitted myself to doubt. And | aerior . | yet, in the midst of the greatest of our diffi- | \Is Her Majesty’s government to ussume OF | culties, I cannot forget that even your Jord- | | be liable to a responsibility for conduct which | ship was pleased, in an official published des- | |Her Majesty's government did = in their | patch, to visit with the severity of your but! | Power to prevent and to punish ?—a TespoOn- | too weighty censure the greatest political | sibility which Mr. Adams, on the part of the | measure of the late lamented President, that | } } 2 . g “a a ; 3 * P ) =| * . : > it ae States lpr me im the a a i 7 | which, in fact, opened the only practicable | | tugal, positively, firmly, and jastly dec or ‘| way to the final attainment of the glorious | Have you considered to what this responsibi-| ond. Under such circumstances, | pray you |lity would amount? Great Britain would | noe ty be surprised if L am compelled not to | become thereby answerable for every ship disguise the belief that with my government, that may have left a British port, and have} ,, among my countrymen at large, there is | been found afterwards used by the Confeder- | still left a strong sense of injured feeling > ; Y ome . ¢ | ° ¢ So » , ates as a ship-of war; nay, more, for every | which only time and the hopes of a better cannon and every musket used by the Von: | understanding in future, held out by the federates on board any ship-of-war if manu- | conciliatory strain in your lordship’s note, | factured in a British workshop.”’ are likely to correct.’’ The rejoinder of Mr. Adams is dated May | 20, and in this document he says, in reference | | to his former note :— mietdicheclaibildlill lit, THE ALABAMA’ CLAIMS. ‘ | The attitude assumed by F;: s ‘[t was my wish to maintain—1l. That the | y Karl Raseel 7 Le yee me | respectin: i j | act of recognition by Her Majesty's Govern- | respecting the above, meete with the ene One journal ment of insurgents as be'l gerents on the high | approval of the British ernee. seas before they had a single vessel afloat was | 84Y8"— | precipitate and unprecedented. 2. That it' For once Earl Russell has entered the oe ne pe “ae ce ot re pel | lists with a foreign diplomatist, and come ;geren aite 1e ecognition, instea 0 ; ; : , “ile out of the ring without a serate /merely acknowledging an existing fact. 3 Ts "C ee 7 f omens roe a Chat this creation has been since effected ex- | ~ wT anesday pudlisned a clusively from the ports of Her Maj aty’a| CORRES correspondence betwaen Her | kingdom and ite dependencies, with the aid | Mujesty’s Voreign Seeretary and the Ame. and co-operation of her Majesty's subjects. 4.| rican Minister at this Cou.t, about the de- I “— ong “ wa et on auenene predations of the Alabama, &«., for which ) in America, of neariyfour years in duration, the W ashington Government demand com there bas been no appearance of the insur- | pensation from this countr The tone and | gents as a belligerent on the ocean, excepting | atele of the corres ae e-crediteble ¢ in the shape of British vessels, constructed, | 14) IR ] . , ” yee efile | equipped, suppiled, manned and armed jn} ‘4! lusse I and Mr. Adams, and it affords British ports. 5. That during the same Us much satisfaction to be able to congratu- period it bas been the constant and persistent late the Forciga Secretary upon upholding | endeavour of my Government to remonstrate | the nation’s rights and independence, and } in every possible form against the abuse of | without hectoring or leeturing. The Cabi- | the neutrality of this kingdom, and to eall| net, whose mouth-piece he has been, refuse | Upon Her Majesty’s Government to exercise | flatly ts vabatnicn the Amect lai | the necessary powers to put an effectual stop | Bi b — h ” : ES A, Oe jtoit. 6. That although the desire of Her &Ve® to susmit the matter to arbitration, | Majesty's Ministers to exert themselves in| In this they will be cordially, and, if neces- | the suppression of these abuses is freely ac-| sary, energetically supported by the country. | knowledged, the efforts which they made|The American demand is really the most ye i y ¢ , "Pe 1 a | | proved in a great degree p »werless, from the | preposterous — to use no harder phrase— | inefliciency of the law on which they relied, | that ever was made by one country upon, and frors their absolute refusal, when sclicit- | another; wand considering the serena. Py. ied, to. procure additional powers to attain dil ihe ealt he m fj es ful em fh the object. 7. That by reason of the failure | 2” . = We Paelage Of, the country. It has been gravely hin'ed in many | their American sympathisers aod brothers. quarters that it had special reference to the | That the funds for carrying on the meditated extension to the Rhine of the French pone toil war were furnished from the United tier. In fact in England this is looked! States, is established beyond doubt, The upon as “a coming event.” The Prussian Government have a large sum actually in semi-official journal Provincial Correspon- their bands, having anticipated remittances denz, of the 11th Oct. says, in refereuce to in the shape of drafts upon the house of the visit of Count Bismark :— Rothschild to the amount of £5,000. If ‘The honourable and cordia! reception, there were any reasons to suppose that this (says Correspondenz) given to Count Bis- sum represented the American contribution mark by the Emperor Napoleon, and the to the sinews of war, or that the few revol- observations of His Majesty upon pending | vers and pikeheads supplied from America, questions, are guarantees for the unaltered | or manufacturec in the Fenian smithy ia continuance of the friendly relations between Dublin, constituted the whole of the muni It is mainly owing to tions of war at the disposal of the conspira- this fact, indeed, that the question of the tors, the Fenian plot would ineeed be a mis. Duchies could be brought to a solution in| erable abortion. But we see no ground for conformity with German, National, ond/arriving at any such conclusions. It is Prussian interests, without European com-| much more probable that the sum intercept- plications. No doubt exists that the Em.| ed by the Government was but an instalmeat peror bas resolved to continue the calm, of the pecuniary contributions promised in honorable, and disinterested policy he has| the United States, and that a great deal hitherto pursued.” had already arrived aud been distributed, The London Weekly Revister aper 20d that a great deal more is coming, or generally vo a sa . om foreign re would be sent without delay, if the explosion fairs, remarks :— of the on had not ae when it wil, te . : did. e Fenians ma monomaniacs, It is about a month since we hinted |),.¢ they are not idiots and we may have peariy broadly that ihe absorption of the) 1. doubt that before organizing their forces D ern _ Serge Say means eee they counted the cost of the enterprise. or P es ae ait a The men and the arms and the money would io “te ae See . a ave not! not be wanting to make the rebellion—pos- dnd TT Otte ae da dike a ent lalhie' te: ellent @ sovelatinnucht shay conspi- end—the visit of the Prussian Premier to recy had bean alt ' : . y ha n allowed totake a head. We the marine residence of the Emperor of the : ; French on the Spanish frontier had for its on7e reasou to ballows thatthe. Ameriaan express object the removal for a substan- cmatann Haaieee least balf'a million—of tial consideration of any obstacles which whom more thao a third are soldiers, used French diplomacy might be disposedto throw | wide gucan did notibroe e aant obutas in the way of Prussian aggrandisement on the Elbe. The Saturday Review denounces ceneanvaaearic al Pann the idea of the people of the Rhenish Pro- of money would keep them back. and that vinces abandoning their nationality and be- the Queen's eroones w the oiiceten aneld coming subjects of France. We see no hive bad ati tactics ins dain justification for this explosion of our O0-| employment for their rifles before the dawn temporary's' indignation and antipathy | 1¢ ‘noxs spring. The ramification of the against the French Empire. The popula- conspiracy has been found in various parte tion of the district alluded to is more French of Ireland, but among the prisoners there is than German in its language, customs, and nth otis liens of ad ih con snd ab the manners, and certain! y nature seems to make informers would make their ponelatlens the Khine the boundary of the two countries more valuable if they could by the implica and races. : tion ofssome person of station or inflaence, “ As we said before, we in England have ir it werg possible, we are safe in concluding no reason for objecting to the transfer of that the most important men concerned in the that territory to France should it be made, let-ave the . who have bees alread for the wider the boundarics of France, the oar with the exception of the “wanted” better for us. There is no country in Eu- iade P s rope with which we are on so friendly a ah: Sepia. footing as France, and no other people with whom it is our interest and theirs also to be on such amicable terms as our nearest neigh- bours. In no part of the earth are Eng. lishmen treated so well or allowed so many privileges as in France. Our tongue is our passport everywhere in France; and the intercourse, social and commercial, hetween the two countries is so great and so increas- France and Prussia. MISCELLANEOUS. The change in the weather this week has been accompanied with very severe storme along the east and north-east coasts, reeult- ing in the loss of several vessels and a seri- ous sacrifice of human fife. The storm ap- pears to have been most severely felt at Shields, Sunderland, Hartlepool, and Sea- ham. . | to check the flagrant abuse of neutrality, the | @8 !requently expressed by Parliament, Mi- issue from British ports of a number of | nisters, and the publie press, upon the sub- | | British vessels, with the aid of the ject, we confess that we are rather surprised ‘recognition of their belligerent character that the claim should have been put for- | in all the ports of Her Majesty's dependen- Tie British Minister who should) ews around the globe, has resulted in the mane t dete he alias aioe burning and destroying on the ocean a large, °°" a a on eee oF ane numberof merchant vessels, and a very large | would mn ee short tenure indeed of | amount of property belonging to the people | “fice. We owe the Americans nothing,and | of the United States, 8. That in addition! we don’t mean to pay them anything. We! to this direct injury, the action of these! hve dove all the law allowed and much | British built, manned, and armed vesgels | more to aid the Federals during the civil has had the indireet effect of driving | yay, by preventing the Confederates from from the sea a large portion of the Com- : Pony . he ty ; mercial Marine of the United States, and to) PrOCuing satns, Sailors aod soldiers from To do this we had 7 e r a corresponding extent enlarging thatr of '2e United Kingdom. ; Great Britain, thus enabling one portion of tO pay beavy costs and damages in the the British people to derive an unjust advan- | Alexandra case, and paid Mr. Laird an| tage from the wrong committed on a friendly | enormous sum for his steam rams. What nation by another portion. 9 That the in-| more could we do? Mr. Adams conceives juries thus received by a country which has | tiat we ought to have altered our Legisla- | meanwhile aedulonslyondeavoused to per} 8 oa passed new and unheard of laws in form all its obligations, owing to the imper-! | ; : favor of the North. England was not and | | fection of the legal means at hand to prevent ! a them, as well as the unwillingness to seek | '8 vot prepared to go sv far for any foreign | Government,”’ more stringent powers, are of so grave a na- ture as in reason and justice to constitute &| Ang the Times contains the following : valid claim for reparation and indemnifica- : . ‘‘ In order to guard against any misun- | | Mr. Adams then enters into a statement of ‘derstanding, we are requested to Fe-yense | ward ° 1 i | | } ! ing that the French are everywhere Jearn- It is said that the Belgian Government has ' h : sent a diplomatic note to the Court of the ing to speak our language. For this great! fuileries, complaining of the facilities afford- and most salutary change we are unques-|ed for desertion from the Belgian army by tionably indebted to the Emperor, and, if| the establishment of a recruiting office at he should, upon the proposition of Prussia | Lille for the army of the Emperor Maximi- extend the French frontier to the Rhine. ae: : a atten : this country will have uo reason to regret arrous.sepesta are Sa ceamation io Busts F go 5 about foreign Powers having offered to me- it or protest against it. diate between the Papacy and the Ltalian Government, in order to bring about a re- conciliation. The Right Rev. Dr. Patrick Lynch left Rome to return to his diocese, from which he bas been more than a year absent, and to which he is now allowed to return by Presi- dent Jobnson, from the general sympathy and respect in which he is held throughout he North American Union. His charity to- wards the Federal prisoners in the South has also earned for him the gratitude of the Northerners. This has been a week rendered memorable in England by an unprecedented event. The yellow fever has appeared at South Wales and carried off several victims. This is the first instance of the vomit appearing in so low a temperature as ours, and shows what an extraordinary September we have through. Since 1811 the thermometer did REMOVAL OF FRENCH TROOPS FROM ROME. The London Weekly Register says that the removal ex masse of the Fretich troops, from Rome, under the Franco-Piedmontese Convention of September, 1864, excites no surprise or alarm on the part of the Papal Government. It had no reason to suppose that the Convention would not be acted upon —-and it certainly feels no regret or alarm at the consequences—immediate or future. The presence of the French Army in Rome was an embarrassment without any corres- ponding advantage. The French General was constantly brought into awkward colli- sions with the Pope’s Minister of Arms, and Surgeon Dentist, | half a mile of Graham’s Road Post Office. THOMAS LAWLESS. tion.”’ can I permit myself to doubt the favourable | the proceedings which took place as regards disposition of her Ministers to maintain omi- | the fitting out of the A abama.contending that, | American Government was conveyed in the | always able to ee ut jeable relations with the Government which [| 'f there was not prima facie evidence enough | following words :—* Her Majesty's Govern- | "a8 obvious to the world that the presence that the proposal of Karl Russell to the the Pontifical and French troops were not not stand so high in September all over Great George Street, | Ota Town Road, Joly 1, 1865. j CHARLOTTETOWN. April 17, 1865.—ly WILLIAM JAKEMAN, Biacksmith & Farrier, Old Stand, near Temperance Hall, AS REMOVED bis business to the) City, and can be consulted at a\! hours SHORING on the most improved principle tH All kinds of Agricultural Implements pre- ptred at the shortest notice. WANTED. a person who has had some expe- | rience in Horse Shoeing. Highest wages will be «ivea. i Charlottetown, Aagust 7, 1865. GEO. BREMNER, ~~ Printer, Book-binder, AND STEREOTYPER, CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. L, Having engaged an experienced BOOK-BINDER is prepared to execute all orders with PROMPTITUDE and NRATNESS. te? Entraace to Printing Office and Bindery at Mrs. Bremner’s Book and Stationery Store, Prince Street, where al] orders may be left. Prince Street, June 5, 1865. —_— —_—_—— ~ —~ we! cf = o 36s 23 233550 So usr of S é [2027 86 © 7 Fons 2 6°85 . =" SC esc * a a ae — — i ae . CS eSSr= % ne Sa C25 > B&B ° & -_ s Cc s~- ea= a so mores te See ef oY =" go & . ct A oo roe Oe Ee gee5 ess~- = sa?ez ho PLASTER, PLASTER, Q’ CONSIGN MENT,— 20 ibis. CALCINED PLAS ER, J.8. CARL VELL. Oct. 23rd, 1865. represent. testimony to the promptness with which all FOR SALE. the numerous remonstrances and represents- Y private contract, TWO HUNDRED | tions which it has been my painful duty here- the South Wiltshire Koad, Lot 31, 5 miles from the }to by your lordship, it is at the same time city, about 80 acres clearand in # high state of culti- impossible for me to dispute the fact that the i | . . | ACRES OF FREEHOLD LAND, situate on | tofore to submit have been met and attended | vation, the greater part being limed, and 40 acres | which can be easily cleared, and the remainder | covered with fence poles, scantling and hardwood of the best quality. : A _ |cheeked, but is even now going into execu- |, there are on the premises a New Dwelling | gion with more and more complete success. Honse 28 by 28, n New Barn 56 by 30, fir owe | That policy, I trust, | need not point out to jcomplete, « Hay House 40 by 22, also a Barrac lordslity. té substentiaile the destruc. land Dairy, and a never-failing Well of Water at | your ordship, 18 subs antia y ve destruc the door, and a stream of water runs through the | tion of the whole Mercantile Navigation be- | centre of the farm. hostile policy waich it is the object of al! ; ; ; | longing to the people of the United States.’’ | ‘This property is admirably situated, being con- | ; | tiguous to Grist, Saw and Shingle Mills, also to} Earl Russell, replying to the note of Mr. pluces of public ne hy ea 4 Adams, under date of May 4th, vindicates | chaina of the premises, and within 3j miles of the } : : | North River" sridge, oue of the best shipping at great length the course taken by fier places ou the Island |Majesty’s government. Adverting to the For further p rtieulars please apply to Hexxyjarguments employed by Mr. Adams, he C. Doves, on the premises, or to eor «| Says :— DOUSE. | * aN > Charlottetown, August 2, 1863. * ‘** Allow me to observe, in the first place, N. B—This land will be sold in Lots to euit| that I can never admit that the duties of | Great Britain towards the United States are ‘ | to be measured hy the losses which the trade | A Freehold Farm far Sale. land commerce of the United States may have purchasers. ; roT]e y oF sustained, The question is not what losses ONSISTING of 175 Acres of Front | o—, 2 as 2 Land, ie = bli state of cultivation, with a| the United States have sustained by the war, °° i } > sj * good Dwelling House, Barn, Couch House, Thresh- , but whether in dificult ard extraordinary | ling Machine, and all other requisites suitable for a} cireamstances the government of Her M ijesty | Farm. Also, One Hundred Acres of Wood Land, | haye performed faithfully and honestly the : the rear, me on nego a en ‘duties which international law and their own } about seven miles from arto e own, and q e i ‘ : : fe | near two public wharfs for shipping prodace, &e. | municipal law imposed upon them. Let m The above property is well worth the notice ofany | remind you that when the civil war in Ameri- | person wishing to purchase a good freehold pro-| ea broke out so suddenly, so violently, and | | perty, being the estate of the vr" or fhe eee so extensively, that event, in the preparation a Vy} 1} + Pe ro-thire oO ‘ ‘ ao. ete cchets teecaties of Henry | of which Great Britain had no share, anne’ | Palmer, Esquire. or ai the residence of the sub ‘nothing bat detriment and injury to Hler | Majesty's subjects. Great Britain had pre- | viously carried on a large commerce with the Southern States of the Union, and had pro- jeured there the staple which furnished | materiale for the industry of millions of her people. Had there been no war the existing | | LANDS FOR SALE! | treaties with the United States woald have MEME seri , Sir HE subscriber, as the Agent of & igeeurcd the continuance of a commerce mu- Samuesr. Conanp, Bart., The Right Hon. | as . Lavrexce Suncivax, and Mr Epwanp Cunanop, | tually advantageous and desirable. But what has been directed to discontinue the system ct} was the first act of the ‘President of the | LEASING LANDS—heretotore pursued. For the) United States? He proclaimed on the 19th j future these lands wi be SOLD on the ye + | of April 1861, the blockade of the ports of terms :—A deposit of Twenty-five per cent. of the | as . t agebass money to be paid down at the time of | 8e¢ven States of the Union. But he one signing the agreement, and the residue in ten | lawfully interrupt the trade of neutrals with }veurs by equal insta!ments. The price will be) the Southern States upon one ground only— | rom Twenty shillings (20s.) per acre oe . namely, that the Southern States were carry- \, ener particulars made kuown at the Subseri- | ing on war against the government oh tn tease G. W. DEBLOIS. United States; in other words, they were belligerenta. Her Majesty's government, on hearing of these events, had only two courses | FOR SALE, OR TO LET, |to pursue—namely, that of acknowledging yuat BEAUTIFUL STAND for the blockade and proclaiming the neutrality business, situated at ALBERTON, now in) of Her Majesty, or that of refusing to ac- bert rr of, ee eee Np knowledge the’ blockade, and insisting upon See neeeile DWELLING HOUSE, WOKK" the rights of Her Majesty's sabjects wo trade Fy “« C ahababe . 4s es . cs (SHOP and other Out houses. About eight acres with the ports of the South, Her Majesty's ‘of the above !and is cleared and in a high state of government pursued the former course as at ‘cultivation. There is a good ORCHARD, full of Googe the most just and the most friendly | thriving trees. : e United States. It is obvious, indeed, This property is too well known to require any a _ a 5 eine cael th ae farther description, and will be sold or let on rea- that the course o gz sonable terms. Please apply at this Office, or on Southern States ag piratical vessels, and their | the premises to JOHN KEEFE. — erews as pirates, would have been to renounce Alberton, Aug. 28, 1865. _. 6m the character of neutrals and to take part in | seriber, in Prince street. i nd 2 i } CATHERINE WRIGHT, Executrix. Charlottetown, October 6, 1864. tf NOTICE! | Ch'town, May 15, 1865. Whilst perfectly ready to bear | ‘® justify the seizure of that vessel, there | meat are ready to consent to the appoint: | | Was matter to make it the duty of Hler Ma- | ment of a Commission, to which shal! be re | jesty's officers to lose no time, and omit no , : : | fe claim isi ‘ing i leffurt, to obtain the evidence on their own | Noe = hich ae ~—e the oan | account to verify or disprove the allegations | UV! at es eae) ae ee | respecting her. | agree lo refer to the Commissioners. These | The controversy is continued by Earl Rus- ‘concluding words limit the subject of refer- | i isell in a note dated 30th August, in which | ence, since it would be inconsistent with the oie : ’ y I « be HF y this labour to prevent, has not only not been | he reviews the facts and circumstances which | position taken up by Her Majesty’s Go-|of November at least 3900 of the Freneh | led to the adoption of the policy of er Ma-| vernment, and with the arguments which | jlesty’s Government, strovgly urging that induced it to decline arbitration, to permit | , there is no reason to accuse Her Majesty's | the claims for losses by the Alabama and Government of failure in the performance of | | overs : , or vessels of the sume charueter to be) ‘their international obligations during the | other ves . . be | i ’ ‘oe . : | war, and that, consequently, no valid claim | brought before a Commission for decision can be made for reparation and indemnifica-| [t must be understood, therefore, that if any | , 'such Commission were agreed on, those | | In closing his communication he says :— | cases would be excluded from its jurisdic- ‘*] cannot conclude without taking this) tion.” opportunity to ask you to join with Her alas | | jesty’s Government in rejoicing that the war THE CATTLE DISEASR. lias ended without any rupture between two | tes entin dietnen chounen signs of hav. | ;nations which ought to be connected hy the). ; 7 : ; mt ‘closest bonds of amity. The Goveranyent of | 9g exhausted itself, It is appearing ei | the United States bave carried on to a sue-| various new localities, and must necessarily cessful issue, with great fortitade and per- command great attention during the coming | |severance, a civil war of unequalled magni | winter, At Wrexem, a number of cattle. | tude. In the course of this war they have infected with it has been killed, and it is! | resolved to abolish slavery. The British na- | extending into other parts of North Wales. | tiun have always entertained, and still enter- | The Salford Meststeates hed.s meeting on | tain. the deepestabhorrence of laws by which | ; : ‘men of one color were made slaves of men of the 12th, when it was stated that the dis-| (nother color, The efforts by which the | ease had attacked five animals on a farm aty | United States Government and Congress; Whalley Range. |bave shaken off slavery have, therefore, the; ‘The disease had broken out in France. | | warmest sympathies of the people of these |kingdoms. The same sympathies will ac-| CUOLERA IN PARIS. }eompany the President and Congress of the e United rates in endeavoring to recognize | Wilmer rs “ We hear of the appear: | the Southern States on the basis of equal ance of cholera in Paris, but the authorities, | freedom. Nor is there any questioa in dis-| from a Sear of causing alarm, suppress all | pute which seems likely to disturb the friend-| details. All that is positively known is | Ship of two nations which, the one in Europe, | phat the epidem'e has reached the French | jand the other in America, are distinguished | 0. pital ; but is ia said to have been consi- | for their love of liberty. Let ear two - derably modified by the recent chanze of tions, therefore, instead of incaptious discus- weather. A low temperature is uafavour- | | sions, respect the honor and believe in the . es : — ‘friendly intentions of each other. In this able for its progression ; but it has hitherto | manner we may preserve unbroken the ties visited this country in September, remained | |of peace, and exercise a beneficial influence inactionary during the winter, and re-ap- ‘on the future destinies of the nations of the peared in full force ia the spring. That a world.” eonsiderable number of cholera patienis The last document in the series is a ‘*con- have been received into the bospitals of ficential’’ rote addressed by Mr. Adams to Paris, seems undoubted ; but is proportion j Earl Russell, dated Sept. 18, in which he so the population —a willion and a half-- ‘examines and replies to reasons adduced by | the number is regarded as infGnitessimal. As } 5 ble Earl in vindieation of the policy of | , ’ a Girt ater. concluding his tan ‘usual, it has broken out in the poorer quar- follows :— ‘ters of the city; but the recent improve- | + T take great satisfaction in concluding ments in drainage, the pulling wen an- ‘this note by cordially responding to your tiquated buildings, and erecting on the sites ‘lordship’s reqdest ‘to join with Her Majes- splendid palatial struc'ures, and tbe exist- /ty’s government in rejvicing that the Wal gnee of a copious supply of pure water— | has ended without any rapture between two these evuses have a greater or less degree “nations which ought to be connected by the +; aionce in arresting the progress of this closest bonds of amity.’ J likewise receive dn miatantian © ‘with great pleasure your lordship’s assur- terri rok a ance that the efforts by which the govern-| ie ‘ment and Congress of my country bave | FRANCE AND PRUSSIA. ‘shaken off slavery * have the warmest sympa- | The visit of M. Bismark, the Prussian \eemepeather pre setlersthereny 2 omaeeaenard elP ime Minister, to the Emperor of the from painful observation to a service extended | * rm , pe the war. Nay, it would have been doing : ‘<a te memaing mach ape Judson’s Worm Tea { |more than the United States themselves, who ' through four years, | cannot in candor yield French at Biarriiz, is causing " Europe. The extraordinary heavy night dews have, however, supplied the pastures with sufficient moisture, equal to 25 ewt. in four nights, : each acre, and consequently grass is abundant. The cholera is creating much alarm at Madrid, where the daily’ cases have risen from 6 on the Lith August to 50 on the 10th inst. There has been another ministerial recon- struction in Greece. [t seems the fate of King George of the Hellenes to form as many administrations as used to crop up in Spain a few yearsago. What has Cireece gained by the overthrow of the Bavarian dynasty and the substitution of a Danish Prince? A crippled revenue, increased expenditure, and the lonian Isles, which resolutely protest against bearing ee eee of the national Disgraceful in the highest degree is the pea gestae ede br hinge ReMi Preudy pes . . | ment bitterly the loss of the British expendi- fact that treason has made its way into the|ture which enriched them during the Pro- army, and that the authorities are but faint- | tectorate. ly assisted in bringing the Fenians to jus-; Accounts from Rome state that Archbis- tice. That treason has made great progress | re er ah ce ere Se : ieee an ’ nniv e ene ee ne erent eee | publication of the brief which re-estcblishea it was long before we could eredit that trai- | th. Roman hierarchy in England. It iw posi- tors were to bo found in the regiments of | tively intended to establish another episco- the line, and even among the non-commis-| pal see in the province of York. in whieh sioued officers. Ik is useless to deny that in| case Mgr. Manning would receive the title of other corps, besides the 2ud and 99th foot, | Primate of England. treason bas found supporters and active —— agents. It may have been deemed wise to) FENIANS DESCBIBED BY THEMSELVES. let the traitors remain in the ranks and! ere is : learn their folly, by seeing the contempt | We copy the following important article with which the authorities view them. Fe- | from @ late English paper :— uians there are in several of the regiments, | ‘* We have now hefore us the whole but they are harmless, for they are well gramme of the Fenian conspirators, and a de- watched by informers in their own corps.— | ae eens 4 obi he deeds contem- F Nie Oaseite plated in a refined and philanthropie age, and Army and Navy | among a civilized people, would be ineredible, /had we not the damning proofs before ua, THE FENIANS. |The darkness is the blacker in contrast with The curtain has fallen uvon the first act the brilliancy of the light, and so when war ae sad >: . gy itself has been divested of half ite horrors b of the Fenian travestie. Five of the 190/11. tomane spirit of the age, men are found ersons who have been arrested in different ready and willing to create a hell upon earth, parts of Ireland, on the charge of felonious and destroy all that God has given and mor- conepiracy, have been committed for trial | tals revere. in Dublin on a charge of high treason.| It is utterly impossible that many of those These are Mr. O'Donovan (Rossa), regis- who have joined the ranks of Fenianism could tered proprietor of the Jrish People, the or- | eee —— have a gan of the Fenians in Dublin; Mr. O’Veary, Seen TS ee ae ae eee : :’ \up the idea of liberating Ireland, or of plun- the editor of the paper; Mr Luby, the sud- | 4 ing the rick angdet towns of England ; of the latter was not at all necessary to the accomplishment of the object in view, The presence of a French Ambassador in Rome is all that is necessery to keep the Revolu- tionists out, and of this the Pontifical Goy- ernment are thoroughly aware, It is thought in Paris that before the end army of occapation will have been with- drawn from the States of tho Church, and have returned to France. ‘The entire move- ment has commenced, and a transport ser- vice been ordered for Civita Vecchia, FENITANISM IN THE ARMY. ,editor ; Mr. O’Counor the book-keeper ; and | the leaders alone, be they demons or lunatics, Mr. O Keefe, a contributor of leasing arti- | conceived a systematic plan for sweepi cles. bese persons constituted the staff of away with fire and eword the creations ‘e the newspaper, aud if the evidence of the ap- laborious centuries of work and wisdom. provers be true. the head of the conspiracy, | W@ <0 not pronounce upon the guilt of the Another chief, indeed, apparently the eek | a ahah eaten ak ae ee Ge of the party—a person named Stephens—_ pers. with decadfel horvere, which fer the has hitherto eseaped detection, althouzh he character of humanity we wish were Geti- was at his lodgings in Denzill street when tious and unreal. the arrests were made by the police atthe The scheme actually pleaned, and steadily office of the Irish People, and although a contemplated for tlie last four years, is thie. large reward bas been offered by the Lord a 4 “sues evan taniiieet ae Lieutenant for his Le h ue "A at a given signal. It is proved thet from the it seems, the chiet actor in the drama, © ist of August, 1865, rambers of men were bad a e.ntrolling influence or power over the, regularly drilled and practised in the use of management ol the paper, and he was the the pike. Ewpty stores and u i intermediary between the Irish Feuisua and houses were rented, and in these nightly, ellie Name ome ain