a Vol, AEE. Stoves! Srovest!! STOVES!!! New and Improved Style for Economy, Comfort. and Cheapness. JUST received e ( Tt | hh. NOS. Stovee—NOT YANKEE MANL AC TURE They are wmmbered 1, 2, and 3, with » and deulbk \ « fer Cook r i Large and Sma ~ “e- tl & & ey will « ‘ « a) i aie 5 ~ i ‘ st 8 hal w ul « 8 mu Vv hleie N e Is ¥ i ’ ve x d 8 lon te i parties whe have used tl for t last five vears, and whoare ready te teetify to their | sefulness. The readiness with whieh the 2 part great heat, has been remarked by all whe use at ORWELL CHEAP) 1] Franklin & Box Stoves, A ~~ ) PGETRY, SAAR SNE Re /1 AM DREAMING, EVER DREAMING. I am dreaming, ever dreaming, Of an Isle divinely fair, Where the golden sunlight's cleamme (in the coun 8 there A) I int 8 i Mr V * i ca gg, oud irc en y i 4s . « Tam dre of her mountains @rand hler ike 8 wre { v ve ’ Ww s t rivulets (re nv oli w scene Where nature tlings her ve il wiees l hills and valleys « Tam dreaming, always dreaming, Of my darling native shore them, aad in eld dwellings as well as new, have | ’ cos we than th: old brick or atone « iimnevs, vhich take up soe mech room, and are now being xeneraiy throwadown. They are supplied with very useful for dyeing pur “ip, or pre paring food for Cattle, onstantly in use, at a very simail metal Lewilera, jure je ses, for making « and can be kept cost fer fuel In al wt, the great advantages to be derived from én productive of great comfort, while they do and without the least risk from fire. | I'm dreaming of the holy wells, The mounds and towers gray, And fairy dells, where ruined shrines Are mouldering in decay — Those relics of a glorious past, Chet Time exnnot restore, Come flitting through my visious » wenderful, cele br ited apa 1S VES | Of my darling native shore. , - dt # a ~ * ‘ tuvited to € tle ina se pect oe a, before t id Winter sets im ppon I ‘ { By iV str 3 ORWELL CHEAP STORE, « er l tr upest Ceoantry Store on the Island, | * Veg © the greatest variety of GOODS may bi WI ee NEEDLI ANCHOR, both | To kiss red | Of classic halls, and east walls . P. STEPHENS, || © Bear isin's pride of yo Orwell ovember | is } 5 ‘ vem - ai Vin i What wonder I'd be dreamin WANTED, at the ve Store, 500 COW and Of my darling native shore! OX HIDES, a SHEEP SKINS, for which vhes pa CASH or I'm t . : : ' es Wide scattered o’er the in The Liverpool and London | shedding thei: 1 in ev'ry cause, FIRE AND LIFE em 7 Oh, heavens! what a grievous sigh TQTTID TAD ‘ Xr ines, Tit itis iain INSURANCE COMPANY, | To.c thew in their go "BVI . } \ . } MU KINS oi ' bt *, 1 ik Agent jor the above frst class | 1] Y English Fire ‘new : Company begs to, ‘ iftenti he public to the advantages “ee ] v ® Lompaiv, in respect to the security v ud peinnptnesste pay loses. which.| MATIE LEB AND WILLIE GREY. ‘ “par: ther Companies, may be safely | on : : . <s eC sapertot these afforded by ome Pwo brown heads with tossing curls, { : t stand. The Livery ‘ Lt ips shutting over pearls, : mP. & L. Tne ce Company has beer Kare feet white it wet with dew successii Operailen «1p Ish With agencies a ‘ ew 1. and : idin leeses it two Awo eyes biack tw 8 , @ ated r u _ Tits sn scribed ca Littl y and girl were they, } i wv _ rung, and ite invested funds } Kat Lee and Willie Grey. . - ’ ? » th ‘ rye « ital, the ¢ V They w , ' ! y rR ge like a I F ‘ i 8 . ™ 1 7 — ~ e Of gre \ ‘ k ‘ i ‘ H i t i] ” I oN t ! - ° h ei ’ y j j \ ‘ 1 hugiand, is on . . care iH if ( t S j > “ss Su \\ ¥ wes, I ‘ . ‘ As sie ewe r ute « ' nm than A maiesiig Waik \ © rex c “A i we s Tite seu as | '?P kK ’ un re Tr 8 ia eed 1 1 y " I) = ( bred eh Cle \ > wt ! \ * ‘ Through the . ele a ert 7 Bove ure id V W. A. JOHNSTONE, i ‘ ; Agent of the L wot and London And Pl iy Fire Insarance Cou pany } Katie's t Nov. I, 1362. isl i -_— —~— —t - - -—_———. | Katie ‘ v i NOW LANDING, | You salt carry oni = * i» a . . And then tossing back her curls, ( -S3 QDER Sehr. Tuomas Cuter, from | ss eeniientahates . i. : NEW YORK— | ar sare you as wei af iris. = 155 Bole. Extra and saperior FLOUR Do you think that Katie gnessed VN h will be sold low for Cash M. LUWDEN, Peake's Buildings. Nov. 3, 1862 NOW LANDING, Ex Carrie M. Rich, from Boston, 100 2s. an, 200 Boxes LUZENGES. a. = MORRIS September 8. AINTS AND PAINT OIL, BAR IRON: also, 100 chests and half cheats TEA, for sale cheap for eash by JAMES DUNCAN & CO. Charlottetown, June 3), 18€2 —— “THOS, CLIFT” from NEW YORK. UsT received from NEW YORK ex * Thos. Crirt 116 si:es SOLE LEATHER. J. & T. MORRIS. Charlottetown, Nev. 10, 1862. 4 Re-Opened. FEXHE Subseriber begs to inform the in- habitants of Charlottetewn, aw! the Island generally, that he has re-cpened in his NEW BUILDING, Grafton Street, where he is prepared to execute all orders in hia line, with aceuracy, neat- ness and dispateh. Constantly on hand, a large assortment of Stove Pree and Tixwane, Coreen Botiens, Sricis and Wonss made to order, at the lowest possible prices. Whelesale Dealers will please call and examine my Stock, before purchasing elsewher W.B. ALLIN. 7, 1852 2in UMBER. fer SUCE DEALS and DEAL ENDS, > PINE } JOARDS, Cirafton Street, Oct Pine Palings Cedar 5) ingles, Sawn do. Laths and Deal Edging for Sale JAMES PURDIE Charlottetown, Aug. 12, 1862. . 5 ’ FINAL NOTICE! dis rpile eubseribers, intending to make an alteration in their Mercantile Business, request I! persons indebted to them, by Book Account, Note of Hand, or otherwise, to settle their respective amouile i r before the let day of Decemlx r, otherwise legal pre ceedings will be taken for the collection of the same, without any distinction of perrons. Oats, Potatoes, Parley and Turnips wille taken in payment up to the above date McAULAY & JOLLNSON, Grand River Wharf, October 20, 1862 Im NOTICE. mpue Suberibers intending to make an al- iteration in their business, hereby notify all ' lebted te them, either by bond, note, or Look account, that their respective amounts must be paid up on on fore the first day of December next ens > as all enme onsettled after that time will be handed over to an attorney for collection without any distinct Lol persons. The eubseribers alao take t} is opport nity to thank in their numerous friends for the liberal support given i tiem ance U ey comine ed busine a8, wi beg to siate that they will continue to sell their present stock at a very small profit for present payment un til the first of November next, when all of their re maining stoek will be offered at anction to make room for new importations, a which time great baryvains may be expected. All kiads of merchantable pro dace will be taken for the j lebta, seach as Oats, Barley, Potatoes, & , until the time before stated; for any sums remaining unpaid ufter that time eash will be exacted The Subseribers also offer for sale two very sn a Bay Horses, oue rising five years old, siands 65 hands high, of guod breed anda fast traveller, the other four years raising five, stands 14 hands,high. If not sold by private aule by the tirstof November they will be offered at public anction JAMES DAVIDSON DANIEL IL. DINGWELL. Rollo Bay, Oct. éth, 1362 “haa outstanding ¢ Half the wisdom she expressed ! Men are only boys grown tall, ] liearts don't change 1 after all And when, long years from that day, Katie Lee and Willie Grey | Stood ayau beside the brook. } Bending like a shepherd's crook— Is it strange that Willie said— | While avain a dash of red Crossed the brownness of his cheek—- “Tam strong and yeu are weak ; | Life is but a slippery steep, Hung with shadows cold and deep; ** Will you trust me, Katie dear? } Walk beside me without fear? } May I earry, if I wil, | All your burdens up the hill?” And she answered, with a laugh, * No, but you may earry half.”’ Close beside a little brook, Bending like a shepherd 8 crook, Washing with ite silver hands, Late and early at the sands, In a cottage, where to-day Katie lives with Willie Grey, In a porch she sits, and lo! Swings a basket to and fro, Vastly different from the one That she swang in years agone ; | This is long, and deep, and wide, @® And has—rockers at the side! | ‘Gleanings from late Papers. ‘THE BATTLES OF HYDE PARK. No. 1. * # It happened that some Irishmen ' 'had a spare afternoon, and were on the spot. | fo'clock. First, the Lrish cleared away the lorators, to get things quiet, They then de- clared themselves disposed for controversy, | down. Next, the orators collected their ifriends, and cleared away the [rishmen. The battle then became general, and, as a |policeman mildly described it in court, the ‘crowd “ pushed each other about.” Those | who have ever been in the neighbourhood of a “town and gown,” or a street fight of any ikind, will have observed how the real hard | work generally falls upon some three or four pairs of fists, while the mass of the! ‘combatants for the most part only shout. | Heroes single each other out, as in a Homeric battle, and the immediate neighbors stop to gaze in awe and admiration at their prowess. It seems to have been thus on the present |‘ eccasion.— Michae! Collins, labourer, jump- ‘ed forward and hit promiscuously. Timothy M:Carthy said a word of exhortation to his countrymen, and then knocked several per- sons down. Deely, skilful hurler of * mis- siles, threw brickbats, and blackened eyes. Whenever irresistible Casey struck, Protes- ‘tants bit the dust. Moyse, cabinet-maker, stood forward for a moment, and the here- ties cheered; but Timothy Toomey smote him, and he fell. ‘The gallant Toomey seems to have had an original manner of fighting, which the genius of controversy invented, as far a8 we can judge, for this ‘particular occasion. Toomey then placed Kis hands on the shoulders of a man before |him and kicked out furiously, 1 was kicked 'Kighting accordingly began about three! ‘and Cornelius Casey knocked a policeman | at | | “f *| + | , { ‘ | { Ae cently Howrna 0 iw? i ) “This is teue Liberty, when Preeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”---Euripides, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Wonday, November 17, t862. in the ribs, and when kicked, Toomey cried out, ‘ Bake that for the Pope.” So the bat- tle raged, till the rain came on and spoiled it, and the champions of the Pope were taken up. They were fined, with prison in default of payment, Thus all went off as it should. ‘Phere was a fight, to please the Irish; the fight- ers were put in prison, to please the publie. Both sides showed devotion to their cause. — London paper, Oct. 4. No 7 Hyde Park yesterday was the scene of a riot far exceeding in magnitude and in its | Serious consequences that whieh took place en the previous Sunday. The publicity given through the press to last Sunday’s pracee lings, combined with the faet that the abandoument of meeting had not become {generally known. caused an immense assem- 'blage im the park yesterday. Before two \ o’clock all the principal thoroughfares lead- | Sing to Hyde Park were erowded with per- }sons proceeding teward it, many of them earrying thick sticks, and by three o'clock the police on duty estimated that at least | 400.000 persons had passed through the ‘park gates. As on the previous Sunday, earth pear the marble arch ‘ } the mound of was the centre of attraction, and at an early hour of the afternoon it was taken Pposses- siov of by a about three hundred Irish laborers, irmed with bludgeons, who ;at once raised the ery of ‘ Three cheers for body 0. ithe Pope, and down with Garibaldi’? Im- mediately surrounding this mound, were sta- ied about 500 more of the game clags si- milarly armed, and who openly expressed | their intention to oppose by force any meet- ling held in favor of Garibaldi, It soon became rumared through the | | crowd that the committee did not intend ot {holding any meeting, and while many ap- |proved of this decision, by far the greater jnunber expressed much disappointment. :On its becoming known to the Irish party on and about the mound, they set up a loud ; shout, and began taunting the Garibaldian party for their cowardice. A working man who, unpereeived by the Irish, had mad his way on to the mound, here rushed to the front, and, waving his hat, and holding aloft 1 board with the name of Garibaldi painted it, called upon the vast mass of people n front and around the wm hy » al ) } ; | 1nd to give three rs for th | Ltahian patriot, which appea tremendous burst of Was respi nuded to by a ny from the assembled the usar ring L in instant a dozen of the Irish bluidgeons rattled about the head of the Gaaribaldiab and he from the ‘mound bieeding profusely. This was the Se 8 first act of Champion, was hu:led ; } ‘ ) vidience coummitied, and Was ioi- lowed by a desperate rush of the Garibal- liaus upon the Lrishmen, who, from the ad- vantageous position y b ld, their deter- ination, and the free use of their eudgels, succeeded in beating back their assailants, but few of whom had anything but nature's weapons at their comm in a f Jurt at this time a body of powerful Irish labours rs and others came upon the ground, all armed with sticks, and fought their way up to their countrymen,who, thus reinforced, fand emboldened by their recent triumph, with loud burt ahs for the Pope, made a des- |perate rush amidst the crowd, knocking {down, indiscriminately, men, women and children, amongst others two or three of the | Guards, who seemed an especial object of idislike to the Irishmen. The Garibaldians, |irritated at this cowardly and ruflisnly at- ‘tack, and headed by about twenty soldiers, | who had rushed to the aid of their comrades, i then fought their way up io the mound, and jafier a severe struggle with the Lrishmen, | ranged about its base, succeeded in obtaining | a footing upon it. The scene now became one of great excite- | ment, | cheering of the Garibaldians and the yells ‘and shouting of the Irishmen, laid about | 'them with unsparing vigour. The blows ‘from the sticks resounded on all sides, and | the blood began te fiow freely from the heads 'of both parties. Kach soldier had at least la dozen assailants to contend with. At bleeding and senseless on the mound, and | This occurred again and again, women being | in the face of an overwwhelming force of | , sometimes thrown dowu and trampled upon, | something like 50,000 fighting Garibaldi-| PUTveyors for the wants of society, But and meu compelled to turn and fly, till the | ans, backed up by triple that number of ac- the soldiers were on the point of being over- powered by numbers,when about half a dozen of the Life Guards, about the same number of the Third Bluffs, followed by a body of | at least fifty working men with sticks and ‘umbrellas, rushed on the mound and turned _the tide of victory. ‘of about five minutes the Irish gave way, and made a precipitate retreat from their | position. One soldier of the Third Biuffs, a short thick-set man, armed with a piece | of park rail, knocked down six of the Lrish- men in succession, receiving in return a se- vere wound in the forehead. As the Lrish- ‘men were beaten from the mound, the people below seized upon those who had made} themselves most conspicuous, and dragged them to the outskirts of the crowd, and gave them in charge to the policemen, several of | ‘whom were there stationed, but with orders | ‘not to interfere, unless under the persona! orders of the Commissioners. Those who were identified as having taken an active part in the first onslaught upon the people were at once taken off to the station house. The Garibaldians and the soldiers being now ‘in possession of the mound, one of the sol- diers was hoisted on the shoulders of his comrades, and said if any of the committee were present who called the meeting last |Sunday, and wished to propose a resolution in favor of Garibaldi, tke soldiers would ‘form a circle around the mound, and guar- antee them a bearing. No one, however, responded to this appeal, but it gave rise to one of the greatest bursts of cheers that ever resounded in Hyde Park, followed by more | cheers for the army." The Lrish, now driven from the mound, /and rendered perfvetly infuriate by their de- | feat in that quarter, formed themselves into ‘several cetacbed bodies of about 200 each, jand foreing their way into the crowd in dif- | ferent directions, began striking at all with- lin their reach. It was estimated that there ‘were at this time 200,000 people assembled, and the wishes of one portion of the erowd to escape the blows of these ruffians, the de- ‘termined stand made against them by other portions, the shouts of the men, the shrieks af the women, and the cries of the juveniles, presented a scene of the most alarming des- cription. Sticks were being use 1, and stones iwere firing in all directions, and gt least , signal fer a fearful couflict. After a terrific melee | Aolitics, j Literature, > = aud Alews, — -— Rg arn a onan ae aaa open may 2,000 people were battling in different parts Savage, of the A Division, who forthwith shiv- covery of the mound. The entire columm, of the park. In some cases knives were | ered the blade to fragments. During one of soldier and civilian, wae burled back pel)- used, and several persons were taken off the! the assaults upon the mound a corporal in the | mell, atid would have retreated, only retreat grouad who had been stabbed. About 500! Coldstreams had his bayonet snatched from! was impossible ; for the crowd below had soldiers were now mixed up im the erowd, its sheath, and later in the afternoon, when massed itseSf around the base of the Redan, |; numbers of whom were fighting great it was recovered, the Irishman wh» had enclosing the assaulting party among them- against the [Trishmen, who, at last, were taken it was sowndly thrashed, and threat-| selves and the irish; these was no getting overpowered, and fied in al directions, | ened with a ducking in the Sernentine, to-| back. many of them meeting with knots of Gari- baldians, by whom they were severely soldiers, who, however, yielded to the per- | suasions of others, aud permitted him to go maltreated. | Sir R. Mayne and Captain Harris, the | Commissioners of Police, now came upoa dually left the par, which became quite cleared by eight o'clock. wards which he was carrie’ by several at large. , About half past five o'clock, two strong the ground, and it getting dusk, and sgeing pickets, one of the Grenadiers and one of the the alarming state of affairs, despatched a Jusileers, marched into the park, for the constable to the Wellington Barracks for a purfose of carrying off the men belonging to strong picket of the Fusileers, about fifty of their respective battalions. whom, under the coneuaand of an officer, but straight to the mound, and just as they as- , without arms, speedily attended, one party | ceuded it a soldier received a tersibe blow taking possession of the mound, and the | on the head from a thick club wielded by an ‘other ordering the soldiers into barracks. | Lrishman.—The blood ran down the face of A strong body of the Division of Police, | the soldier, who was led away in a fainting who had been kept in reserve in the Marble-| condition, his dastardly assailant eseaping Arch, were also brought on the ground by pluvging into a mass of his sympathising under the command of Capt. Harris, These countrymen. After this the pickets cleared measures, combined with the retreat of the the mound, of which they beld possession till Irishmen, and the approach of dusk, put aja body of poliee approaching half an hour stop to the proceedings, and the people gra-/ later, when the military power yielded to From that time the police held A large number | the ground, and although there was a good | the eivil. They marched One looking over the forest of beads saw (a swarm of sticks a in the me cries of y and encouragement, keenly above all the war-showt of * The White Jackets’ — ‘ Hurrab for the Pope!” Several times the pressare from above forced baek the attacking mob, whieh yielded with a slow movement, as if to some gigantic me- chanical strain. Conspi amongst the combatants was the huge [rishman we have before mentioned, and a Foot Guard of im- posing proportions, whom the Garibaldians bad instinetively adopted for their leader. This man, because of hi oar and weight, and the buge stick he wielded, inflicted se- vere Gamage on the heads of the Irish. The struggle raged for upwards of half an hour, and ended in the complete defeat of the Ga- ribaldian party. They retreated amid the derisive cheers from the handful of victors, and the sorrowful exclamations of their friends, he Foot Guards seattered over of persons were severely injured during the | deal of disorderly and tumultuous rushing | the Park, on learning the defeat of their afternoon, and the various surgeries in the to and fro, with an oceasional scufile and | comrades, hastened to the seat of war, _neighbonrhood were erowded with parties | wholesale destruction of hats, the fear of | where they were received by the Garibal- waiting to have their wounds dressed.— London Times, Oct. &. ’ _ ee The ‘any very serious outbreak was past. dians with a@ most ge enthusiasm. | people had begun to disperse at five o'clock, Leading a body of at least 2,000 men, and when a few drops of rain fell and gradually charging under the cover of a shower of THE SECOND HYDE PARK Pient. |‘ puedthemafterwards, Butafine moonlight | stones as an assaulting purty advances un- so eee night was the meaus of prolonging the demon- _der the protection of artillery, they advance stration; atseven o'clock therewere stillsome to the Redan. Thrice they flung themselves We publish to-day two of the many ac- | counts of this extraordinary affair. | The first we from | London Times, which, after stating that at half-past four there were 80,000 to 90,000 persons on the ground, and among them some thousands of Irish labourers, proceeds to describe the contest :— It (tae mound) appears to have been first 1 fake occupied by a mixed body of people, but ow- | ing to an aggressive movement of Irish laborers it was soon held exclusively by the champions of the Papaey. The Garibaldi- uns Submitted relucatntly to this state of things for a short time, three soldiers appeared belonging to the Foot Guards a ery was raised for *‘ Garibaldi,” aud some dozen men Or so attempted to re- gain a footing on the mound, thousands of people remaining on the ground? the anti-Irish | nq jit was late before the park was restored back, to its usual peaceful aspect. against the [rish—thrice they were beaten Before another ebarge was made, the As the result | * White Jackets’ were attacked on the of the afternoon's amusement, in addition to flanks and in the rear, and the Guards, with of injuries received. Most of these were cases of broken beads, but there was one (an [rishman) who had been stabbed in the thigh, it is said by an Ltalian, and who re- remains in the hospital. in addition to this, about fifteen men were taken by the the soldier whose head was broken as before their supporters, storming the front at the mentioned, filteea people were compelled to! same time, the three parties got mixed on visit St. George's Hospital in consequence | the platform, and the fight became indiseri- /minate, At last the Irish, overwhelmed by |a force against which there was no contend- ing, abandoned the Redan, and rallied on the open ground. The Garibaldians,assured that the fight was over, began the long pro- | mised meeting, but the first speaker had not and when two or police to the Marlborough News Police-/| finished his tenth sentence when the audi- Station, charged with assaults. Suggestions tory was cloven apart in four directions as were rile among the Irish as to something to be done next Sunday, principally by Lrish if by so many wedges, and the Irish burst in upon the astovished Garibaldians, over- luis Was the soldiers; it may not be* amiss should an turning the chairman, and clearing the [t became sp-| order be issued to confine all such to their | mound of all but themselves in a few mi- parent in a moment that almost every Irish- | tarracks on that day, and if the mound of nates. The bafiled Guards, foaming with man vada §I session, aud with these they struck about them rightand left, crushing hats and break- ing heads with reptless brutality. The Gari- baldians struck back in return, some with sticks and some without, and for some ten minutes the struggle was stifficiently fierce to awaken fears among thé spectators that loss of life would eusue.— Une stalwart [rishman laid about him with a heavy-look- ing stick four feet long and two inches in diameter, and another with a roughly squar- ed piece of wood, equally long and equally strong, aud with suarp edges, until both were disarmed by the Garibaldians without the intervention of the police. At the end of this struggie the Irish remained masters of the ‘ Redeu,’ as it was termed; but sud- denly there came up about a dozen soldiers —Coldstreams and Grenadiers—-who shouted for Garibaldi and charged up the mound with desperate gallantry. Twice they charged in vain; but a third charge was successtul. Up they went, amid loud cheers and cries of} Irish, their expected numbers were rated at. ‘Go it, brave Guards,’ and were followed by some 200 people. The front ranks of the [rish gave way; then there was another fierce struggle with sticks and fists on the summit of the mound ; and then the Irish were kept off to a man, leaving the position |in the hands cf the Guards and the Gari- | baldians. Suddenly some sticks and stones |sors. Away went the Irish, away went the removed in the course of this week it may uot be an entirely useless precaution, The Universal paper, tells the story as foliows :— rom an early bour on Sunday it was plainly evident, from the multitudes thar thronved the Park, that a renewal of the previous Sunday's contest was anticipated. Long betore one o’clock there must have been between 12,000 or 15.000 persons assem- ‘bled. Many of these had formed knots under the trees, or were collected in talking groups around the benches and in front of the pali- 'sudes, A strong force of police was posted | within a short distance of the Marble Arch, ‘at Hyde Park Corner, and to the rear (of the right wing of Kensington Palace. Rumour had it that the Guards, the bright ‘uniforms of over a dozen of whom were visible in the black masses of civil life, were to be present in strong numbers, As to the \from 10,000 to 40,000, The day, which 'was brilliant and warm, wore on until News, an L[rish London | ick or a bludgeon in bis pos-| exrch—the Redan of Hyde Park—should be disappointment, called on the mob to follow them, and renewed the assault. At this); juncture the big Guardsman and the big | Irishman met face to face. Up went the Celtic park pale, up went the Saxon wat- tle; and the next moment the soldier with a crushed skull rolled heavily to the earth. de was borne.off-by bis comrades amid the | victorious cheers of the Irish. No farther (attempt was made to dispossess them, and | they held their ground until the police made | their appearance, at whose request they left ‘the Redan, without the faintest show of | resistance. ee |THE ILLUSTRIOUS COLONEL SLEIGH. | Populus decipi vult et decipiatur, once the parent of questionable miracles, is now pro- ductive of unquestionable marvels. is vere hamane principle of supplying the cra- 'vings of humanity for hambug, is devoted ‘now to utilitarian purposes. It gratilies the | wants of society, and it doubly blesses the benefactor; it relieves the numskull of the ,money that burns in his pocket, and trans- fers it to the possession of an individual who | it 2 é é i é 2 25 Fry if iff i m entitled, ** Pine Besetipent say, a ny out rather ably worded tisememt"’ of himself. He aspires but a half-a-dozen more iotic electors to the fore it would have ina representative. Ben ie es tak Re coming, and the next day the gallant Colonel went, pot into Parliament, but into the In- solvent Court. Had he only achieved the Rat be wee act t be jen trifles. Like the phoooix’ | Sy oe COLONIZATION EXTRAORDINARY, On the 5th —_ a but rat ably worded pon aoe in as news rs, establis the Bites Columbia Cverland of convey- six weeks (some five days Jess than any other route) at the small ee of £42 each. The was ** limited,’’ “* te be registered,’’ en- dowed with all the other talismanic adjec- tives and participles that commonly bewilder plain people in such documents. ‘It had, ap lusual, di bankers, brokers, solicitors, an office in Copthall Court, and the indispen- sable secretary. Inyisible in the but ubiquitous everywhere else, there seems to have a genius, or ‘‘ mana- ger,’’ called Co.onel Sleigh. We know no- thing of thie Colonel y more than the Army List does; though some of the passengers intimate pretty round! ‘if they had heard the name of Sleigh connected with this company, they : never would have with a penny. But the Directors among them some good names—Mr. F, M the Hon. F H. F. Berkley, Mr. S. Starkey, &c., obtained ag it appears, for a company * to be registered ,"” and then used as if precess had already taken place. There were bankers—Messrs. Robarts, Labbock & Co.—with whom an ae- count had been opened on the fuith of such names, and upon the magn ficent deposit of _two o'clock when the detached multitudes | is disposed to put it into general vireulation. | £2; and Solicitors, who seer to have knuwy from all parts of the park gravitated slowly | There are vast varieties of modes in which | litsle or nothing about the matter, and towards the mound. The now famous heap | this amiable desire of supplying this market- the appointment asa mere affair of ss os of rubbish seemed to be selected by common | le article appeals to an appreciative ‘consent as the spot on which the aati tel /were to test their respective strengths. It ‘The soldiers, who were armed with were thrown at them from below, and the/| consists of an oblong mass of concrete, of | |sticks supplied them by the crowd, amid the Guards plunged down to punish the aggres-| irregular height, with sloping descents on all | suades the unlucky sides. The platform or top would accom- It offers no faecul- was flying across the park, spreading fear | ties for defence, and, being exposed on every and confusion around them. — Like a herd of infuriated oxen, they rushed onward, car- |side, was open to attack from any part of the park. With those disadvantages to con- blic. Sometimes it 1s by an itinerant vaticinator, a long-visaged gentleman in a white choker, who frightens his hearers by announcing the immediate approach of the millennium, per- possessor of bank-stock that his dividends will only be payable at Guards in pursuit, and in a minute a dense} modate about four hundred people, standing | the most for a year or two longer, and in- disorderly mass of 5,000 or 6,000 people | closely packed together. duces him tv be generous, when apparently even parsimony must soon be unavailing. | There are medical hambugs, who make you | ill by their horrible advertisements, and cure | you by giving you an innocent prescription rying all before them, till it seemed to occur | tend with, it will be seen how mach Irish of bread-pills,f exacting only a liberal allow- ileast a dozen men were lying at this time to them that they were running for nothing, pluck and endurance were taxed to hold it ance of faith, and a modest gratuity. | wonder was that serious injuries were not in- ‘flicted upon many. Then at short intervels, | tive friends and sympathisers. Hold it they did, however, with what result we shall see. These are, however, very common-place \there is no branch of human aaeene which genius cannot distinguish iteelf. tronomy has its Soyer ; acrobatism its Blon- din; Medical Science its illustrious Brennan whenever the police fixed their eyes upon | Soon after two o'clock cheering was heard | and Tumblety ; the exhibition of the marvels /gsome prominent aggressor, they made a | safe custody. the cool manner in which they went to work. in the direction of Apsley House. The ery jmod. ‘TheSlatter, by this time had swelled of nature and art, its Barnum,—and why plunge into the heaving mass, and resolutely|of * Here’s the Irish!’ ran from mouth | should not colonization have its artiste? brought out their man, generally, but not al-| to mouth, and the Garibaldians, feeling that | . ways, succeeding in conveying him away in| possession was ten points of the law, sprang | It is asad mistortane that we cannot preciate illustrious men until we have lost them! Colonel Sleigh has forever abandon- 1t is impossible to overrate | upon the mound, amid the applause of the! .4 his native land, and has sought in La | Belle France for a scene worthy of his genius. ‘Three or four officers would thrust them-/ to some 80,000 or 90,000persons, amongst! It is time for us to recall some of those his- selves fearlessly into a mob of 200 or 300, whom were a number of Italians, and a_ toric memorials of a gentleman whose bene- infuriated men, collar one, cling to him, and hold him, despite the attempts made to the bare assertion of the authority of the law, and this not for a brief period, but during the course of several hoprs. The Guards and the Garibaldians having firmlyjestablished’their supremacy, quiet was regaiued at one time for about a quarter of an bour, and, taking advantage of this in- terval of rest, a working man came forward, who, in a brief speech, deuounaed the Em- peror of the French, as the would-be Die- tator of Hurope and the enemy of Ltaly, the opponent of liberty everywhere, and, above all, the hater of liberty in Kagland. In conclusion, he called for three cheers for Garibaldi, which were lustily given, and when he asked all those who sympathized with Garibaldi, to hold up their hands, a forest of dirty hands was extended. Then another speaker followed, who with great common sense said, ‘ Knough had been done, It had been made plain to the world that the feelings of the people of London were in favour of the great patriot Garibaldi; and with that assurance they might setuie down without any more speeches,’ This speaker had hardly concluded when the tumult was renewed, the mound being lost and won several times, and the rushes through the park followed elose upon each other, while conflicts with sticks and stones were both |frequentand severe. Knives were drawn severa! times, and one formidable weapon, ap- parently a shoemaker’s knife, with a wooden handle and a blade nine inches long, was small sprinkling of French. In less than ‘ten minutes the Lrish, marching in a com- favour bis escape, never drawing a staff or | pact mass, entered the park, and swiftly | striking a blow, but holding their man by | traversing the space between the gates and_ the mound, halted for a moment in front of the mob, ‘Hold your ground, my lads,’ 'was the cry from the English to the gallant defenders on the Redan. * Let the d—d fel- lows try us,’ was the response. An Irish cheer drowned the applause of the Garibaldi- an sympathisers. The multitude opened right and left for the Celtic leigon, who, rushing up the slope, drove the Garibaldians down, and established themselves on the platform, with a cheer for the Pope. It may be well to mention that in consequence of their gray smocks the Irish were nick-named the * White Jackets.’ In front of them, as they stood on the edge of the Redan, | glaring at their discomfited antagonists, was /a man of Herculean frame and stature. He was armed with a park paliog, in the use of which his faculty was enormous. Lis fol- lowers were of all ages and heights — some mature men, some boys of fifteen or sixteen. A number of lrishwomen had collected at the base of the Nedan where they kept upa running interchange of sarcastic abuse with an equal number of English females. No blows were interchanged in this humorous contest of wit and invective. * Three cheers for the Pope!’ ‘*flurrah for Garibaldi! ‘Get along, you dirty Papishes!’ * Can't you make us do it, darling !’ were a few of | and a the cries which one standing amongst the crowd might have heard delivered between the opposing parties. In this sort of war the Garibaldians got the worst of it. 'yolence has been almost world-wide. In his own department he bas been a veritable ‘Howard. He has supplied the Canadians with an allowance of hambug that was suffi- cient to satisfy their cravings for a few ;months at least. Little Prince Edward Island remembers his brilliant career there ; and proud may she be of having bestowed upon him that title of Colonel, that has been ‘associated by history with his name. A ‘slight sketch of his career may not be unin- |teresting. About ten years ago he came }out here as Captain Sleigh. He had more ‘the appearance of a London attorney than ‘ofa soldier, but it was plain he had in ‘the army, and military men are occasionally /not very distinguishable from more useful but less distingues personages. He had no money, but he had what was equally potent. Tf he had no ** tin’’ he had an ample supply of ‘brass. By its aid he purchased a whole ‘township in Prince Edward Island and was | made a Colonel of Militia. The Garden of British America, however, was not a suffi- ‘ciently wide field for his labors ; he purchas- jed a steamer, the ** Albatross,” by paying for it, not in vile postage-stamps ar irredeem- able paper, bat in that more valuable cireu- lating medium which has contributed so /much to the success of that nation. He li- terally paid them ‘in their own coin.”’ From his ample funds he manned and equip- |ped his steamship, to ply from Quebec to ‘Halifax, gg the pioneer of a line of future packets. Le entertained his Excellency the | pp _Governoy General and the Canadian big wigg at a very recherche dejeuner at Quebec ; and ‘subsojuently received his numerous friends Dunivove in a similar manner at Halifax. The champagne was excellent. The host | was everything that could he desired. Jf _gny of the pious gentlemen who partogk af The | Bis Wine and bospitality encertained any ‘doubt as to the ‘* ways ang means” of the taken from a man who said he found it ly- keen Celtic scarcaym penetrated their mar- "agreeable Colonel and land proprietor, they _ing on the ground after one of the tumultuous row, and headed by a dozen Foot Guards, | acted on true Christian princi " | rushes, Pais was delivered up to Sergeant belt in havd. they made a dash for the re- and eat and drank, * asking no questions for con- eightpence.”” So, she arrangements were annouuced to be complete ; ships were adver- tised for; and ** no fora could be entertained y 17.” Some doubts were as to the practi- cability of the scheme—especially by a per- son writing under the of Youn, West,”’ to whom the replied ig the Times of May 23, a8 he says, ** with eon- siderable surprise, and I may add, r tion.’’ One or two questions were asked ip Parliament, and answered with the enlightenment of the official wiod ot sufficient lucidity, however, to satisfy Berkley, and the affair proceeded. Ghangow, eotvertes thant in s shamer » em in a to Quebec, and thence onwards *, Minnesota. From this point they be forwarded by steamers or an ‘* emigraps escort train’’ over the remaining - ot the jou yy 0-2 A nePPy cour Gitte, Tite °o™— $ t iy" - ey — agent there, —7 , ayward, 8 one eee the freon Eng!and, * how money he eg to pay the fare to Fort Garry with. Mr, Hayward, with equal * told him he bad none, and hoped Mr. Hime had plenty.” equally wnestieocuory weeny np the firm who were e i i they appropriate] tion Company.” In short, money, No credit, no provisions, no no transit, no escort, ** no nothing ; the unfortunate emigrants were left to settle ideal of the city of rand pedncing fir. Mark Tapley’s theory of the * jolly"’ j rather lugubrious practice. One of who were able to return, Mr. C had the forethought to grm hj powers of attorney, to act ip beb who were left behind. When he ggriyed in England, he naturally sought the P tolemed Copthall Court and the sosiety of Sleigh. = - dismay, the had eva —-the offices were r Lefops long, Colon Sleigh bad closed his banks ot the West End, carrying away the booke with him ; bis yilla jn St. John’s Wood was digmantled, and the furniture sold off ; ang he is said now to be enjoying the a of a goad conscience ymong the gaieties of aris. Colone} Sleigh’s own yersion of the affair can oply be from a letter with whieh he hag fayoyred 9 certain Captain Nicolle the only who appesre hitherto to haye taken his liatulities, ke & goog husband fur bettez for worse. *+ West End Bank’, S. W., Thursday. «* Dear Captain Nicolla,—Until I hear of the safe arrival of my passengers in Canada and their comfor departure from St Paul's, I do not intend tg eond any more pas- 5. NN A EN BOE 1 A ia cee ae