— Vol, XUL. A Weekly Honrnal of “This is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”’---Euripides. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Esland, Monday, October 6, 1862. Politivs, Literature, and —= —— aT oe SSS ey New Series.---No. 39, FOR IMMEDIATE SALE, tABLE WATER IWN, containing re \t DES! UBUAGAL acre of LAND. with usual privileg: tnowe| 42 O W + AI ye, in For } by the Subs KOR Flour, Tea, Leather, &c. | a r | O-.'S i. LITERATURE. Tit THE END OF SUMMER. as N ! ; P INT Lor. tT rms Cas 1or short m > > » BR i‘ i FI | The golden hours of summer time ,.— time on 8 curity. Apply to the Hon. JOSEPH | peg ] 50 b> S. Xtra State *iOur, The happy guests of Nature’s prime Hewsiey, Charlottetown. ASS) . Boles P, Crunc ry Are } rswiftly by; . istry 10 on . : December 2, L861. tf a rEA ‘ , | lhe Sun drops low his eh: igs ’ . — 50 sides New York Sole] r { And, cherub-like, his shining r ‘6 i ; pn : j ‘ : ai r } 44NG, CHCTUD- ING, DIB BHININL Megs Warhblington”™ for Sale. | 00) Gunny Bags (cheap bags for grain) Whee! down the southern sky. on : Cis i 2 Wuintals ihah | FPXUAT desirable property, belonglog to f ALS 7 aad Leet _danes Witsos, Eaq., sia of 3 res of Just arrived per Briet. Trenomse— ne weet wind site and sighs alone, LAND, ina tate of cul ery con-| 100 Bbla. “ Southern" Superfine Flour 4nd to the south wind making moan, venie DWELLING Hous! a good JU sides best New York Sole Leather Weeps out her life in rain ; GARDEN, and an < re a valuable OR California Hides And dead leaves from the river-st CHARD M LUOWDEN, Peake's Buildings j : ety % i ee ee This 1 a‘vater f t Que n-street June 9, 1862 } Pay ghost-like at thy cottage dor ry fi: a’ - — And whisper at the pane. me oa: fy asking te oc Stoves ! — van @ 0 , = Ve e . . . any property ir Is i \ \ Wa. DOD t N mStowes - aa The wild fruits feel the fiery stress, a ivneet r to the s8ubscr ONE CARGO OF STOVES } And darker ing with life's rich excess, a vos oct HOMAS PETHICK a oo lt ain Ripen and redden fast ; harlettetown, April 28. IS st re : ust Arrived from And hoary arcbards staggering down Summer Valley FARM POR SALE. A Rare Chance seldom to be met with. the FINO be Sold, i ¢ beantiful FARM the abev 120 acres of the besi mt on the St. Peter’a Road i Hills Riv WwW e. ‘ af ‘ Houses the Ba i dik a FRANCIS M Saw Mill and Dwelling FOR SALE. — PPSUE subs *sriber has received inst the FREENOLD of ONE ACRE OF MILL in perfecs HOUSE situat Lot 54, and now belong } > pa ly sz 1 mi digan Kiver, and about 32 f 1 Georget & good tuvestMent f sutry at ence, and terms, which w known by r FOR SALE, VALUABLE FREEHOLD F in Brackley | t. La ur ‘seal ‘ ‘ Leasehold Interest of land in Prince Edward Island GE ORStsrTiNe of ‘ COOKING STOVES, with BOLLERS, for wood and eval; Fi STOVES. fur wood and coal. r about A A few dozen Metal Coal SHOVE Mea oe i cash to 12 months & Charlottetown, A 18, 1862 Lioyvd’s Register of British and Foreign Shipping. , LAPSING OF SHIPS CLASSED A. | ph 3 [ having been found that t - i ative NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that in pur-| ARM,}| tay i Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, | different sized | ranklin and Box } A few very ueat Parlor Cooking Stoves, Spare Stove Purniture ofall kinds, | (LS for feeding } The grassy slopes beside the town, Their glowing burden cast. large METAL] ,, : : lhe acorn slips to its mossy tomb The beech-nut falls; the wild black broom I Is crackling in the wood; | The vine, like some tired Mcenad lies, Thirsting for rain with weary eyes, Stained by her own bright blood a down the hills, ve, will please ' Soft mists at times float i Before the wind that -RLIZZICK a : : Phe pur} i@ Porve avove isl rw 2m ! And creep along and flood the vale, ay And die in sunlight, fair and frail, As human Life or Love. And darker shadows kiss the stars, And mount upen the shining bars Or Suan rs Waning hyeht he regulation While ¢ of r music break whe rel , From hollow winds, and stir and shake = t ‘ ae » of thei The s g fi st six ‘ sider e el ud rowd vold, y t | n 7 } : pia nat till and white, i i, i yi é r= : ain | he night, a aa 3 ; a ed. < — And whe hath power tal birth} ates ny " To at si! ‘ se on € , y, 1803 As With a soreerer’s v i! ' , ; a re Nor Titan-oak, nor fairy me ved e ad é ‘ “3 ; Can the w ta bI i by { Sped by d s cunn ! ‘ ) IE I s FANG See: v > } . } o¥ ' 4 ; BE « cla F 4 I i— i S > i Hi KS rf i — | Beats 1 D 1}! Tt1is Mill Down dewy ‘ , itr - WIT scp IV ila wh dew) . rio KUN £ Ung WLS, . hi vain : ¢ ‘ And stony stre i HE subset return thanks to their cod Oca i i i ‘ r for the es Soon the bright bea s ee! the gust N71¢e L ¢ ‘ us ' iC Use in the BES! The green bark crumble i SLY! SHORTEST NOTICE, an And laughing fi ywers grow fe ws : \ isiness this season Nor feel the kiss of mort lig] - . i prices in Prince Edward a. hee ts pores > Piette warwuit, ? fal . ; Ner trouble when the moon ix white, LAND.j Pulling per vard.........s.. aes Shrined in the pearly dew. Fu venti. > occcs sisal os oa 26 i <i> u Fu D Half-Dressing 0 Ok M Ne saa | ow >t ‘ > > ‘ Y D 2 mex (STORY OF A PARISH BOY. » ( Green pe $o0 66 bd 5466 cebebl bake oy -éi z : WOMEN’S WEAI George Dale was an orphan hoy left in Dveing Bp Be te oe 0 0 infancy to the charge of a parish in Notting- . be ) 0 ° . oa ° ie - . c a a 2 » 2 ,;osmshire, His mother bad not survived rvetne Beariet. per lca i sds. ckcuce v3 hey ° ah P his birth, and his remaining parent, a poor . bh i ‘ Agents p | Dut honest man, had svon followed her to K Gor | the grave. In his early days, accordingly, “ Es George had a taste of all the comforts and ( Mr. Davy 5: . : ° ‘ oo liscomforts attending a life dependent on eS t;| public beneficence. But fortune was kinder tohim than it isto the generality of youngsters in the same circumstaoces. A lady of the Petia f COVE , Wi : ‘" s ae \ . . ‘ ines in een oles e ef Salt M 1M Jul} 1562. neighborhood, the widow of a respectable on the property, with a good ¢ ‘ 26 feet . ‘ I sc ERMA ume : inded proprietor, chanced to sce the boy in _ a Ki chen a . ‘ i~ X IV Tet we ie a | Queen nSul dill? Company the course of her eharitable vis tations, ar d and a good ult ac a zood Barn Ni 7 mag Ora tyes ee ee 46 feet long, with or without the ¢ For a sum OF LIVERPOOL. was struck by his fine, cheerful, healthy rattan baat o ees ‘the | FIRE AND LIFE! looks. Mrs. Blakely bad lost several of a « ss ©} ise 1 .* : - 4 4 - . i , , remainder in twelve months. Application ta be FEMUE Sul ; ‘ : : . ,, her own children, and her ar xiety for the Meat & Subscriber, having been appo . : ' made to the subscriber, « € premises ae t abscriber, having Veen appointed | iwo vet remaining predisposed her to feel JOSEPH MACKINNON, ageut for the a rst class Insurance Com . . S erR . ik June 16th, 1862 Sua pany, is | ured ty take risks en all deseriptior a0 interest 15 Other children of a similar — , mere ae me | BOK rty web. 10 J. 5. CARVELL. age. Such was the effect, at least, of her . gg a Py . u fetownh } li } ial af } ; Rare Chance to odtaln 4 r | Situation, operating upon a kindly and gene- FARM! EXTRACTS FROM NEWSPAPERS |rous heart. She bad, besides, thought of d 4 , ‘ s * . ° YOR SALE. Bredet tat j SRM Onr t r a Parliament. and training up some boy to bea companion and SA ZUERC.s ent i oT tnd 7 ° I Mh rt eet nennr MH . attendant upon ber own son, and the sight | PAR agproent, wesagag Oy LAND el 9 : jeorge Dale determined her upon mak- ; of George D k _ ened . - 4 ' < paid by an ipe choice c i 7 his »rnose 6 are in a good sta ivation mene ‘ . 1000 ow an paid by any| ing choice of him for this purpose. fg eb Sea es * ech +. de jacq | cvaritable feelings were thus at once grati-| he land and a good y ‘ [From Gore's Get l Adi ser, Oct. 24, 1861 ag : of auinie tea tek a cieedll ai _ ae fied, and a desirable object attained. © ‘nines é scriber lk wm . dene we ve t we are pertectis justi y 1 = - T serie oes aoe ; ke wiikx ton When George Dale removed to Blakely | rest ' = wre lar ve : tppite ic ill i”, ‘3 1 : mediately “ H.J. RHODES an income in Hail, be became, as had been intended, the | : ae . —. he Quee . oD Georgetown, Sept. 8, 1862 su we Qveen | attendant and companion of Frank Blakely, | z reehold Property ‘for Sale. VALUABLE FREEHOLD PERTY for Sale in Georg Lot N “Ml ik ‘ Lett 1, Ww i H ther tJ linze, al g s“ard rensir : weil hi Lae a ay + $2 wat ht “haz ' sila, & & Div e PP mare ~y . cents té ~ et te t ‘ L. J. W Ththa. ‘ ‘ Jet Nove time, ext, if no ‘ ' ' ; Aii pe 1g any cian, i . er Wi . pers # indebted to ihe « acri'< ‘ i forth witd JOHANNA oe, 1562. Georgetown, — : eT ring the ree years | FOR SALE! uo other Company, within the sa DOO) ACHES of EREBHOLD LAND or ee ee tek on Lot 49, twelve miles from Sout tee get ; aud three miles from M , Post O es the 7 i conve to Grist Saw Mills “ft the la “n S S ‘ I ther parts - det whieh marked the investm PATRI Maple Hill, Lot 49, § L. ~ 1 Ot FOR SALE, A SALADIN MARE, in excell She ia very gent Saddle or Marne a — “ —_ roudet. ‘ i harrows. She wv ‘ ‘ ation to be mac ‘ Ex ' e June J NOTICE! To be Sold or Let, ryRe GRIFFIN KR CARR ient STORE and WHARF now oc- le alle Sa ce niin PRO- Reyai, aud Lancashire losuran e t+: Town jFrom the Civil Ser e Gaz ca We * Amen - ' 9 nent f . ay \ i 4 pe vi S | ite al sf | rietors M re ‘ i i¢ tina ei, t f the a i since its jour s s. i f wd; a ‘ ¢ x igre tae lic ¢ : a iF Live 1 Mercury, N« “y “ »> the x and espe t t rs a ‘NOTICE. Tae Subseriber ~~ Flour! Flour! Fok SALE, 100 Bbls. D uble Extra of the Blakelys and George D aliy, nnd that iis m- intends to make OUsl Ness latement, we + edd boy of his owa age; aod also of Harriet | idon, the Blakely, a girl about two years younger, or | ov. 2. 1x6) | Batly five years old. Not only did George | '. | participate in the sports of these children, 4 $s stands emi édccees: “4 but he was also fortunate enough to partake, s Veen ‘ held | by permission of the kind patroness, io the er page will | !structions given to them by their family “progress tutor. He became a great favorite with his Such | young master and mistress — two children whose naturally good qualities had been i carefully fostered and improved by an anx- ious and sensible mother. The hardier early training of the orphan boy, indved, fitted ased at bim admirably for being a useful and agree- atteats at “attests ab t, aud the pub- 2, 1861.] i rene : beheve that! able companion to Frank and Harriet in rin the Fire their out-of-door amusements. To gratify Bo tre their slightest wish, he was ever ready to = mal ‘ot | clamber up acy height, to travel any dis- were tance, and, in short, to undertake any feat ana of boyish adventure, however difficult and — perilous. At the same time, he profitred so much by the advantages afforded to him in the way of education as io be no unfit some : or unworthy associate for them ia other this fall, SO | connate all eas lebted to him by Book Ac- | respects. “s—u fast count or Notes of Hand, to settle their respective| ‘The distinction of station between chil- gh or me - I e 10th NOVEMBER, other . . ‘ =e ; 2 kek tao Soe eolleeti dren in their early years is little heeded, app W ise val j 8 Willi Oe tucen ior colecuon, : : PS : : without any distinction. : | gad is felt least of all by themselves. They : J WIGHTMAN. almost reach the age when serious attach- a " St. Andrew's Point, Augnst 7, 1862 © ments are formed, ere they bevin to feel the distinctions of rank, This circumstance, as will be found, materially influenced the fate The dif- ° acs he McDosatp Brorners. Montag ; : ail ania sialtte . —- ; ete nh ee ede rine, for Cash oF agree TURDIE, | ference between them io point of rank was Mi ge ' me SA] ywive nen : ured. aay JAMEL ‘ >? . > ' 1 ove Wishing for the above desirable Premises, cui Charlottetown, Sept. 8th, 1862. si scarcely seea or felt until Frank reached the Get time for payment, if sequired ee oe aun (age Of sixteen, and left home for Kon. F P. STEPHENS CE EDW SLAN : : S Orwell Cheap Store, Sept. 29, 1862. Im PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Harriet was thea left alone. As she was £2 Howse. at Si. 3 Satherland « Fertune Road Refer: : town—H LD). Brenan spoa—Dr. McKeon, the proprietor. Dec 1 Revisit ry Olfice FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. Capital, Two Millions Sterling. HE Subseriber having been appointed from England the Agent of t! ished and well kno » Company, rank the irst ia Britain, is prepare} Be a and take risks for 0 property April 7th 1862 To Let or Sell at Once. VALUABLE BUSINESS LOT and r’'s Bay, adjoiniz On the (July 14, 186 The London and Liverpool gy ¢€ insurance on @M deseriptione of ; an W. A. JOHNSTONE, Agent : CLOTH MANUFACTORY, an ouly daughter, her mo her deemed it some time afterwards was confined through of the Celestial Empire, better to take a personal charge of her edu- | TRYON. g Mr : : sup] t received in the : : ; Sten 5 aan Bud Dusiness, Devs to iniorm the inhabi i nm ms . i 1. in the United States, and shortly prepare the Colonies. Other branches in the same which must H. J : y of the age s jor ue learned Mill, from Can ve i partic ulara tants of P. E Island that be has imported from the best makers i - CHARLES E. STANFIELD. | Tryon, April 21, 1562, Tue Subseriber, encouraged by the very Cation at home than to send her to a board. Exercise iu the open air being an essential part of Mrs. Blakely’s system of training, Harriet still bad to take walks and Cloth dreseing ing-school. Machinery for Carding, Spinning pouy-rides, and still George Dale was forthe | : and Weaving, ” jean fin addition to finisbing Cloth) will be | unequal to any lengthened excursions abroad. | young geotleman who had visited Blakely most part her compsuion, her mother being 1 to receive, Wool fur manafacturing into Harriet also had trom childhood shown a the various descriptions of Cloth usually made in he Cola 1 oa charge for Picking, Oiliag, Carding, Spinning, and Weaving will be : : ili ard. enabled her to procure and train numbers o One shilling and three pence per yard. e p proportion i dried, may Street, Charlotietown, or great affection for birds, perhaps chiefly be- cause George's boyish adventurousness had Wool, them herself, so izing her testes on the sub- e left with ' jeet, Be this as it may, as she grew up whom further she had formed a considerable aviary, to which she went on aiding from time to time with George’s continued assistance, SO RN OR NS OT NN er ' senses, for he had but.swooned through pain, Several years ran t son§ of our story in the same relative cir-| Mrs Blakely never again to entertain any cumstances, and engaved with the same thoughts of marriage for ber in future. When amusements and occupations. Frank had! George Dale heard of this, and listened to passed from Eton to Cambridge, presenting | the confidential regrets of Frank upon this himselfat Blakely cation seasons. GeorgeDale, in the mean-| After what had passed on the morning of his time, had grown handsome in pers¢ . q Mrs i yn and intelligent in mind, that Harriet loved himself. The thought Of it, had not found it agreeable to her feel-| contention within ended in a firm resolve to | jinzs to make him a common servant. She! sacrifice everything for the peace of the | had placed h fhee of her steward! family to which he owed so much. He de- /Or overseer, and thus supplied him wiffi a/ termined to quit Blakely Hall: and, as he min the respectable occupation his hours excepting those which he still de-) he resolved to explain the true cause to voted to the promotion of Harriet’s amuse-| Frank, only hinting at that as a suspicion, | ments, and the gratifitation of her tastes, which be himself was almost inclined to think with respect to the feathered creation. The | a certainty. | ouly disturbance of the peaceful routine of | /existence at Blakely Hall occurred when / ness, he sought an interview with Frank, | Frank came to spend his vacations there.|and made his intended communication, Qn one of these occasions he brought with) Young Blakely was much affected by the ‘him a friend of bis ows age, soa of a gentle- | disinterested integrity of his early playmate. |man of property residing at no great dis- * Would to Heaven, George,’ said he, ‘ that /tance. ‘Lhis young collegian was evidently | you were her equal in station, or anything | Struck with the sppearance of Harriet! near to it! I could not desire her happi- } Blakely, who had, indeed, become a lovely! ness to be in better hands, But as it is, young woman. George Dale felt a bitter,! the thing is out of the question, You have and at first inexplicable pang, as he beheld/| done rightly and nobly ! the place which he had so long held at the} * Nothing but my simple duty—nothing ibridle-rein of the young lady taken up by | but what gratitude commanded me to do,’ \this smart and handsome pupil of the} said George. | Canbridge Alma; and though he could not! + But you shall not lose by it,’ continued | belp fancying that the change was not pleas-| Frank: ‘if I, ifmy friends, have the slight- jing to Harriet herself, he took bimself se-| est influence in the world, you shall not lose |eretly to task upon the subject, and made a/ by your conduct.’ {firm resolution to crush in its infancy a fecl-| Frank Blakely did not forget his promise. jing of whose existence he bad previously He exerted himself so earnestly with the |}been unaware. or ‘its presumption and| member for the county, that a situation in | folly he rated himself most severely. jone of the public offices was procured for Harriet, of course, showed her brother | George Dale, and, to enter on it, he quitted | her aviary, with its in ‘reasing stores. * Aar- Blakely Hall. For the next five years bis iriet, y dear,’ said Frank, ‘| am surprised career Was @ Most prosperous one, and de-| At the moment when, ir company with the |that you have never attempted to tame the|servedly so; for his industry was unremitt-|¢°Urteous and accomplished director, I en- | wood-pigeon.? ‘ing, and his talents of no mean order, At /never yet thought of it; but this isthe very| which be had ascended one by one had season, and George here —-George was stand- | brought him into possession of a very hand-/ ever, overcame the difficulty, and it was no ing beside them at the time—* is so careful | some income, and given him a respectable of them w {of our little favorites, and it is really no | During the interval following his departure | leruelty for us to take them away.’ from Blakely Hall, he had heard nothing of | ‘There is 2 nest of wood-pigeons at this | its inmates, excepting that Mrs, Blakely, | moment,’ said George, “upou the single old | his kind patroness, nad died. In what con-| | ploe-tree at the north edge of the park. It | dition Harriet was, whether single or wedded, will be an easy matter to procure a pair of ha had not learned. But he himself had rds for Miss Harriet.’ not forgotten the past, and it was therefore ud was thoughtful a | with aa anxious and fluttering heart that he atiength,*I donot perused a letter, which at length came to him | think that we could ever tame them. George, | from Fravk Blakely, inviting him to visit | | you need not take a@y trouble about it.| the Hall asa guest and friend. The note | That tree—I th was brief, and entered into no particulars. less and dangerous oe.’ George lost as little time as possible in ac- cepting the invitation, and speed:ly followed up that acceptance by presenting biwself at the gates of the well-known abode of his! youth. George followed them with his! He was received in the first instance by | c ‘Miss Frank alone, and the latter entered at once Harriet does wish to have these and isto a cobversation most interesting to bis thought he to himself, | guest. one } j young v Harriet looked dowf tmnoment. 7 N said abe a ; bak oe uk | kuow it—is a branch- | .No further couverssgion passed upon the | Subject, as tS coll.ge cliem of Frank then ‘eame and juoined his friend and friend's ! sister, and the whole three set oif on an ex- | curs On. eyes as iong aS they Were Visidie, ° ) birds, she shal] have them,’ 5 . ‘ ‘ as he slowly turned from the spot. ‘My dear George, Harriet is yet un- ae at ee . married. She has refused all offers since Early on the ensui gy morning, ‘,eorg< : ; f . } . s ‘sk : } : you left us, in so decided a way that I have Dale was at the spot 1 by wood- a. ' a oa neta ; a ' ite at last become convinced that she either re- pigeons; and wihst Was t resuit of i . —, ; - : , , _. |solutely prefers the unmarried state, or st Visit was discovered by rson short- yi . i mbrance of yourseif. ‘Lie aiterwa 1s Har b » Ww to . — 7 Y ¢ : she subject is a delicate one, and [ have had no irom CODSCIOUSDessS that Siie had hever exe 1 . : ‘ar xplanations with her; but I must tell you pressed &Wist0 woico WUeorge did not at- . ‘ ? ‘ a t nstantly sses a wish to re- { empt to gratify, or from some other motive, i Pcs . (aha i ‘ , er Agmnde| hal edie eictS main single, and, as she is quite cheerful, " though not very gay, she may in this speak the truth. But you are now in a respectable position in life, and were you even in one ess so, I could not see my only sister’s chance of earthly happiness, if it does not} depend on # union with you, thrown away. | I jearned that you were still unmarried, and | now you have my full sanction in addressing | Harriet, if you choose it. But be not too| confident: I teil you again that she ever ex-|} presses a wish to remain single.’ 3 directed her steps ob . age the same spot. As she approached it, a young wood-pigeon crept acr her feet, A fi itter of pleased surprise agitated ber bre 1 to lift, but with tender hands, the poor little creature. ‘ How fortunate!’ thought she; * there will be no oceasion now for tak- ’ ss the path, almost at ast, as she hastened She little ¢ ing any risk ubout these birds knew at what cost the young bird had been brought down from its nest; but learned the trath. Approachin she saw with horror the Dale stretched apparently | of its trunk, with a thick but rotten branch by his side, telling too plainly the story of his fall. The young lady rushed in an agony of alarm to hisside. Ali was forgotten by her at that moment but the spectacle before her. Feelings, long eoncesled, almost un- recognized by berselffound then instantan- h h f of the wid a i w i eous vent. 1», then was seen another proo! of the wide ap ‘ George! dear, dear George !’ | *™ ; ‘ : exclaimed she, raising bis head, and prese- plicablity . Benedict terns sen. iret W hep ing her lips repeatediy to his pale brow: I said [ would die Mag + did not think I ‘O Heaven, he has killed himself to serve should a mass L were married. Harriet me !—to gratify atrifliog wishof mine! I Blakely had muca the a ae her shall die also—I cannot live after bim! 2°°#*#00s. oe Dale had sepia ber George, dear George, speak to me ! first avd = love. Throwa into his society : in childhood, she had loved him ere she knew | fo this manner did De young lady express | what distiuctions of rank were, or at least the wild and agonized feeliogs with which } .¢..6 she could appreceiate them. When she behela the condition of the George made the offer of his beart and hand her childhood, she accepted it with a blushing joy, propor- tioned to its unexpecteduess. So ends the story. It bath a moral, or rather a double moral. It tells pareuts, in the first instance, that if they would not bave the young to form connections out of their station, they sbe soon? foe George thanked bis young pat 3 fotta’: of. Georee yeorge thanked his young patron most | ifeless at the {oot the tree, warmly, and confessed that the feelings | which had made his former position most | ‘trying, were still predominant in his breast. | ‘ But be not not too confident,’ repeated Frank with a smile, as George concluded | his avowal, George and Harriet were left to them- | selves for some moments that evening, and | } i ; i companion Oi Ere long he regained his ) his shoulder being dislocated by his fall; and he recovered in time to become fully aware of the secret of Harriet’s heart, dis- closed in the moments of her distress. At Sd Ge ae ot : : ee : - lirst he sent a 4 ne couid a Ve DoTrne a - **' must guard against opportunities being given « C 2 acer ‘ “ ¥ ims | ge ie ot} + : - 5 ; > pain of his acci cap. Sete adeageatete re FOU" for it, and remember that there is a sort of his eyes, to hear her voice and her express- | free.masonry in youth, which takes no cog- ions a little longer; bat his better nature rs : : é nizanee of social inequalities. Ere the con- regained the ascengafecy, ana cven in that sciousness of these is acquired, the affections — me oor to mind bis own stato) may be irrev veably engaged. Bat our little af —T sad nimseill. to assure her « ® wos ° - ss ber o He roused hi mset', SO assure Her! story has also 3 more pleasing moral; for that his hurt was comparatively slight, and! 0 2.3 -:,; net a i eC we find in it self-command, and disinterested- that if be could but get a little assistance 6.5 and high principle displayed under the | he would beableto walk home. At first, most trying circumstances, and in the long- she would have had him to jean upon her ais colverded i te ett appropriate man- own orm for support, but at length, directed ner—nawmely, by the prize which bad been by him, she went to. the nearest cottage for! 59 nobly rejected, when it could not be ac- other assistance. She soon re turned with cepted ee ae two or three of the cottagers, but it was eee with a 4 _— " be oe ere 5 — K colors . A Jetter from China, in the Sempahore by reflection on the events of the past balf-| - yy. cites. says:—The legation of France hour. ie d a communication from Prince George Dale was carried home, and for i nag receive Kung, fering. in the name of the Emperor to the widow of the While/ unfortunate Admiral Protet, who was killed r S the consequences of his accident. | he was in these circumstances, were very kiud to him, as ind ‘had ever been. It was at th that from conversations with Frank and those whe visited his sick couch, he learned something which interested him deeply. The ting the Taepings ander the walls w, 100 sable-skins, and some rolls of embroidered silk from the Emperor's In add:tion to this, a deeree will con- fer titles of nobility on the family of thej Ad- miral, and two Catholic churches be built at the expense of the Chinese Government, one at Shanghae, and vane at the spot where the Admiral fell. the Blakely’s , whil ydeed all of them at period, too, stores. Hal! with Frank, having gone bome and re- ceived his father’s sanctioo, returned to the Hall and proposed for the hand of Harriet. To the surprise, and algo to the zegret of her mother and brother, who thought the match an excellent one, the suitor being of good character, and heir to an extensive estate, Harriet gave him adecided refusal, and in 2 place of any Satisfactory explanation, made| year 1860, show a deezense of $145,223,105 Sateen the Kensington Museum. for £680. Po aud found the per-; matters worse by begging her brother and Hall only during the va- subject, a struggle took place in his bosom. | up into a fine young man, | accident, he could not but feel and believe | Blakely, if she had ever even thought | excited a mixture of emotions, but the mental | vhich engaged all could not quit it without giving a reason, | As soon as he had recovered from his ill- | ted : a : . : ; | the act of endeavouring to remoye the ir ‘No, indeed,’ was her reply; ‘I bave the end of the period mentioned, the steps | ee a. hen young, that we never Jose any | and gentlemanly station in the world, | with the sight of ‘‘the entire batch of loaves, . since the panic of 1397. A paschal candlestick, a relic of Archbishop Thomas-a-Beckett, hae, after seven centuries ,, of adventure, reached a safe haven at last in lt was purchased The tables of export ef the United States for of agricultaral productions lost to the com- the year 1861, as compared with those forthe merce of that port by a SEE me =f A eS _THE BREAD 1800 YEARS OLD. | ‘Tie Privce or WALEs aNp mis Wtre.—The The discovery, at Pompeii, of this remark. | Princess Alexandria, 40 whom jit is pow able relic was briefly mentioned in our last | understood that the Prince of Wales will be week's issue. The particulars are thus given | married at no distant day, was born Dee. 1, in a letter from Naples, dated the 9th ult. | 1844, and is conse wently not quite 18 years The excavations which led to this morning’s | of age. She is said to be tall and well-look- discovery are in continuation of those which |ing, and has received a most careful eduea- have beensproceeding for the last two or three | tion in her own family, which is generally es- months, and to which I shail not further al-|teemed as a model of all the domestic virtues. lude, ag a detailed description is already in | Enough is known of the qualities of the Prince preparation. Toe last two days, however, of Wales to give hima strong hold on the may be separated from the rest. The house | public good will. Evena Prince cannot have upon which the workmen are at present en- lived to the age of manhood without giving | gaged is of considerable size. It displays an | abundant opportunity for forming an estimate average amount of the ordinary decoration | ofhis personal attributes, and the Prince of which prevails in middle-class Pompeian| Wales has moved about s0 much, and has houses ; and it also presents on its outer walls | peen thrown into communication withsomany several of those curious electioneering ad-| bersons of all grades and countries, that his dresses in which Pompeian candidates, or | character is thoroughly well known. Weare \their friends, were wont to appeal to the | indulging in no courtly flattery when wesay municipal electors. It was not, however, tat the kn »wiedge thus gained gives usevery | until yesterday that the expectations and | reason for favorable anticipations of a career _ consequent vigilance of the excavators were | that must, in the ordinary course, exercies raised beyond the ordinary degree. In a cor-| mach influence for good or evilupon the social ner of one of the inner rooms was found a and even the political fortunes of the empire _heap of silver and copper coins, to the num- | of whieh he is one day destined to be the | ber of above 500. They had seemingly been | principal personage. The Prince has shown | tied up together in a little bag, which, how- | himself to all those acquainted with him as ever, has entirely disappeared; and at first | frank, generous, and manly in all his ideas, _ they were agglutinated into a mass, although | His attainments are more than table | they have since been separated without diffi- and he has seen more of the world than most (culty. At the same time, and near the same | men twiee his years. The admirable educa- | Spot, were found two Jarge shears or scissors, | tion he has received has healthily expanded | and soon afterwards a house mill of the ordi-|a mind naturally intelligent and observant. nary description, together with a little heap He has been brought up under the auspices of corn, the grains blackened indeed and | of no narrow clique, and every thiag about | somewhat shrivelled, but yet fully preserving | him would seem to mark bim as a enutleman | their shape and very little diminished in size. | in a sense far more wholesome and Catholic | Even if these indications had not sufficiently | than that in which the expression was pointed out the house as a baker’s establish-| plied to the last eldest son of an English | ment, all doubt was removed this morning | Sovereign. The public feels a filial interest | by the discovery in the next apartment, not and affection for him, and this feeling wiil | only of the metal seoop or shovel with which | most certainly be shown on the occasion the loaves were placed in the oven, but also | which is to exercise so important an influence of the oven itself, the mouth of which was/on hislife. It would be idle to deny that closed with a large iron door, not attached | when it was lately announced that the at- by hinges, but simply, as at present, cement-| tainment of his majority was not to be mark- _ed at the edges to the faces of the four large | ed with the rejoicing naturally to be looked |slabs which formed the mouth of the oven. | for on tie occasion of such an event, and that even the Prince himself was to remain abroad in privaey until after the 9th of No- vember, very general disappointment vailed ; but it was everywnere felt that there was one whose slightest wish must override all other considerations in the matter. It wae at once recognized that during this year of meet to the Royal Family, the most im- plicit and tender respect must be paid to the every wish of the ebief sufferer by the calam- ity of last December, and the deprivation wae at once submitted to, and the reason for it rea- ar dily admitted. With 1863, however, we may deed every characteristic except weight and | expect this privacy to come to a close, and colour, precisely as they came from the! while the country will not the less regret the baker's hands. W hen it is remembered that | Joss of the good Prince whose death every one up to the present time but two such loaves | regarded as a great private calamity, it will had been discovered, one of them imperfect, | take pleasure in giving to his eldest som the the interest of this discovery wil! be fully most palpable evidence of its loyalty ~and appreciated. 1 ought to add, however, that, | good wishes on the occasion of his marriage. unlike the loaf in the Museo Borbonico,| We haye reason to believe that the Princess which is stamped stico * Cray * £ * cIceR., | to this event will give so high a place these loaves have no baker's name or other | among Englishwomen is in every way worthy mark They are circular, about nine inches | of her destiny. We bave a right to feel a in diameter, pines flat and ees ne kind of father-in-lawish interest in her dently with the elbow) in the centre; but} sonal appearance if they are slightly coed at the sides, and di- caeneetinten ie poor ae a vided by deep lines radiating from the centre | ter we have no right to be dissati-fied on this into eight segments. They are of a deep score. The branch of the Danish Royal Fa- brown colour,and hard,but exceedingly light. | ily to which she more immediately belongs 1 can hardly describe the emotion with | enjoys universal respect in its own country. which I found myself thus brought into the She will receive the most warm welcome in immediate presence of everyday life of old/ her new country, and all Englishmen will Pompei’, and led to have an actual part in | cordially associate her with the sincere good completing the unfinished work of eighteen! wishes ‘by which they will surrowad the centuries ago. How little did the honest | Royal Prince in whom her destiny will be Pompeian erafteman, when he sealed up the | jinked, stock for the supply of his customers on the | IN I ea morrow, anticipate that it was only tosee| A Wonperren Discovery.—A correspon- the light through the hands of a generation \dent of the Boston Transcript, who is the then undreamt of—one of them a barbarian | Topographical Engineer of N. N., states that from the Western Isles, after the lapse of oneof the most wonderful geological discore- eighteen hundred years'!—N. Y. Albion. ries ever made around the White Mountains ‘ | hes just been brought to the notice of acientifie ApvanTaGE or Apventisinc. —The follow-/men. Two young men of Berlin Falls in ing letter to the New York Tribune is writ | Siding sone the cliffs of a rugged mountain, ten under date of July 7, 1862, and par-| + m.les from that town, found the entrance ret Q an enormous cave, the existenve of which ports to be the production of one of the most was unknown before. Wm. D. Sanborn, a eminent and successful manufacturers Of | noted guide in that region, made @ thoroagh that city. It was volunteered by the wri-/| exploration of it, using candles to light bis ter in acknowledgment of benefits confer-)/ way. Finding in it a beautiful mineral of red on the Jridune and for which he holds | bright color, he re rted the fact, and the himself deeply adebtor to that journal. We |¢4¥e Was visited by Mr. B.S. Brown, a mine- commend it to business men universally :— oon who found the entire cave was made : y of jasper of magnificent color and quality. “You have done a great deal of work for |The entrance is sv small that a man can me in the way of advertising, for which you |barely enter it on his hands and knees. have been paid, as far as accounts current | About ten feet from the entrance it is nine are concersed. But I owe you another ob- | feet high and fifteen feet wide, opening into ligation, which dollars and cents will not |* fine apartment sizty feet in length, formed eay. _‘Thevugh pete alvise aed pours clans, /&2 °TS.S socacel ictal ne I was led to advertise. For ten or eleven | a3 to draw exclamations of surprise and ad- years I had carried ou a very fair business jiration from the dullast student of nature. without advertising, and no man in my em- | But the wonders of the cave do not lie in the ploy was ever out of work, except as a mat- fact that it is formed, but in the fact that the ter of favour to him, until the commence- | long disputed question is now settled as to ment of the present hard times, On the! where the Indians of New England got their very day of the first call of the President voter hove bapere ull aaaniene iinenaien for volunteers, having & ee ‘of a blue color, which they used, tates Sonn. on band, I stopped my Maaulactory, and re- | Tore can be no doubt but that the Indians, inained idle for nine months. I tried adver- hundreds of years since, commenced the work rising, at first in asmall way. I found that | of ebipping of pieces, and continued their paid. | tered the bakehouse, the workmen were in door, but one of the handles gave way in the attempt. A little patience and care, how- soouer withdrawn than we were rewarded such ag they were deposited in the oven seventeen hundred and eighty-three years ago. They are eighty-two in number, and are all, so fur as regards form, size, and in- - >-+ At the end of three months [ incress- work until a cavern of sixty feet in extent ed the amount more than ten times, using a | was cutout of the rock, for the top and sides great many papers, many of them very liber- of the cave ail show that it has been oe ally ; and for the last five months have ad- | '® many thousand places. In many places tend sensitively thas @esbune 00 the vein of jasper has been cut to ite inter- vertiens He See) P P J section with the granite, and there the work other concern in the couatry. My men are ee stopped. An Iodianaxe and tomahawk were again busily at work on full time, although | found in the bottum of the cave, such as were since December last | have changed my sys- used during the French and Indian wars, tem of business from six to eight month's) when the Pequawhets, Pennacooke and An- credit to net cash. I am now making more droscoggjns wandered in this beautiful region : selli » woods, than any time —'® WHReh their savage implement are now goods aad selling more % For all oat am {ound in ‘abundance. Berlin Falls is in Coos greatly your debtor, and I wish to say to | County, New Hampshire. . -__ ae you, and through you, to all interested, that The-Jtalian journals received last night [ now know that advertising pays. I have | deseribe the agitation which prevails in every also learned that advertising very largely | part of the kingdom as excessive. Many of brings a much larger per centage of return | the _— — ress — have not hi- an advertising i sual way. therto been made known. 1€ accouut given then ecieontiping, 6 she SaaenGey | by the official Cazette of Turin of Garibaldi’s i departure from Catinia, says: —**In the even- Evesre oN THE Srricken Frecp.—A mem- ot R iment, gz ver of the \iassachusetts ] h & ent in of the 4th Gar iba writing a day or two after the battle of Cedar Mountain, speaks as follows of the proceed- embarked on board them with a portion of i subse t to the battle -—** Day before bis volunteers, leaving however the wain bo- aa ote battle field was no, Wes the |dy behind He was diseontented and dis- white flag, and open to all parties. Lt was couraged because the population did not oo a novel sight to see the Yankee * mudsilis’ itself favourable, and supplied him — er and the secesh lying on the grassside by side, with aid moe money, end all the potable per- debating the war question. Then you would | 8008 had leds. see a group of four playing euchre — two of our soldiers against two of theirs. The two great temperance man, aud sets a geod example armies, for the time being, were on the moet | Os tots) abstinence as far as he is secu. Not long friendly terms. There was no danger of ayo he employed s carpenter tu make somealter- disturbance, as no arms were allowed on the | ations in bis parlor, and - repairing oe field by ei 7 /near the fire-place it was found necessa oe ae PO a | move the walnscesting, when lo! a discovery was The total valuation of all the real and per- | wade thet astovisbed enya A brace - ce ‘sonal property in the United States in 1560, | canters, a en _~ te > a a on according to the census returns, was Sixteen poring there as) they stood inning. The Deacon was summoned, and as Thousand Millions of Dollars. The calcula- | the blushing bottles, be exclaimed ; tion did not inclade the property ef the Ge- | .'w.y 7 declare, that is curious, eure neral, State, and Territorial goveFhments. | 1; myst be that old Bains lett them when -. hae ne | out of this ‘ere house thirty Pears ago.” “ Per- Parise Dear por rae Warstie.—The haps he did,” returved the carpenter, “but Des- New Orleans Advocate figures up @ loss to con, the tee the piteher must bave beew friz that city of $250,000 000, as the effect of mighty hard to stay all this time, secession already experienced. Of this am- : ee aa m3 ount £150,000,000 is put down as the value A bili has beea in the Ken y 3 Senate providing thet where a wile attempte to take the life of her basband, the husband (eball be entitled to « divorce. ~~ —p ooo eo -— A “Nip” on THe SLY.—Deacon Johnson is a the suspension of . | trade. ae an a | a ase MRE tne 7 bd er aes Se Te el 0 vy on ilid es roe 8 OE a