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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1863-06-18, Page 2• ; it testy t. 1 our troops w tightine. D hen lee ' to the fight aid bec.toe ygiadu:ally tare way, dept. of tie ground desperately, bowe,c tit way der nre:t made more than a dozcu charge, into the midst of tl:e rebel rookie re - 0 seg almost entnely upon the aehee, atrial Mei used with terrible effect. The eucmy, eM on the oilier laud. hepeatdey charged also, all .tit relying on their revolvers fur the newt part, re, cehtn rat however. Both sided were rtpcated.y driven buck its the county it the battle, tIuusb we t "-""tge, with succeeded i, Whining the rebels—Fitz flush awl, that rewiuded Lee's and Wade Hmn nun's divisions of cav- e. in that way. airy, with artillery, all eman•nded by Maj.er. :l, til the couuecuon, the: Geeerul J. E. 11. Stuart -back to a punt 1le,.1 seemed its her view 1ettteruper, about six miles suuth.weatof where their pick .etc. or unique, passed under the .Le were first encountered, where tens :eon •• persiflage, ' 10 which °end she turd the enemy so hsariIy reief reed .with Ali gave a wide a .d uuiverurl sighifi- infantry and artillery as to wake it prudent to . ,ce• ' return to this side of the river. "Great darkness coven the lad's mind," . This commenced int about 4 p. m., General „eel put turtb Siiiiesbv. '• The slue of the fttltrta pleem ttou bringing off.aboot •,,,,,oiottdred take with are riaited open the children, even emu the pofficers remiers, .hie own wounded, and the bodies wentieth generation. in the en - he had already I With whicthprof sad ,actkction Obed tipped grt)reret. The Siete. Priimer killed is cavalry, d onw that she had w I once Enure upuu his tees rd fell twee to his which was in the advance. under Butted, lost give it more serious cowed- i P1 'e• heavily, including six uhxn killed, wuuuded " There's a beds'," deposed Milken, phase or mudwg. ' he added." thought of securing sophicaliy nodding towed Obel, ea he woJ aervit-es of vac ati+s OF tet aur,, AT yu esarao. 1bNlled his presentee hggage engagement," a shall have h full of pn>cchecked untations. If there Ms horse, "that ianything y1 • Everything bee settled down tutu that dull, .a A. most wee and prudent selectiory" said' bate, its proclamations." dreary.wonutuny which mai at ouce the corse Mr. 7yandrou, "sod 1 doubt not that he will ! The wunl a pruclamatiou ' earthed next to And the dere, of many duriu,7 the siege of readily inclines, wet, „„rel'' the adventurehich seere'' persiflage" with Pleiena, and wain employed Vicksburg last sunmuer. 1 he weather is enough of danger to ftacivate his iteasie e. I when the latus would nut quite express her dreadfully hot and is euervatiug effects are Loo. I meaning. already seen in the faces and forms of the A tall female -of particularly thin confer. "The critter hoe the gift of speech to a stoutest men. Since -the brilliant occupancy t of tie rear uf 1'ickebar• on the 13th of -1 a T merino, mounted upon a bony and angular bean, and attended by a youth upon • Cwut, steady -paced sag --tubo had been riding in advance, erected ber Lorieto allow those in the rev to come within speaking distance.- bow til- his saddle, had been rides; Lulls This wM DO other than Philen* Foote, the Watennu for the last ten mortes. maiden lady spoken of by Mr. Waldron tit his I'hilena tossed her head scornfully, and first conversation with Lockwood ; end the eat a reproving look at the forester. • 1 i bat hey " lad who kept rev her was the halfwitted boy ' 11'hatevergifu Ur.. nose - may e, also mentioned et that time. she answered, wash palpable severity of man, Philena had manifestly turned the second ser -" and all psopk bay. theirgifts in one comer of maidenhood, and stood an eligible eta and arther-he hasn't the gift ofperil- :: eaodhdate fur sinele-blereedueas fur the term "fie*" •- of ber natural life. filer face sympathized "There you hare me at en advantage, bandy in that thin, sharp contour which has mist, for I duu't undersand Choctaw well been noticed, pa -renting uncomtuon length euou •h to know the meanie' of geiaedage, and a clearly perceptible de6ciency of breadth. penitluge, or whatever it may chance to be," nun tespuudeel rererfail, with stat male u As r- B A n horseback, her perwu gree aaaur• ' &nee of _rent elutude when reseed upon the Feeling it beneath her dignity W mike art natural supporters of the human body. Her ''ej"ieder to this, I'hi:ena curled her lip cuu- eyes wine gray arld not wanting in prying temptuorlr, sed quickened her speed, restlessness of movement. tier akin was CA.1l'TEIt IV. somewhht sallow -from age. or' illness, it , stat he inferred -while not • few well defined we#hkles could he seen about her •fon•bead end mouth, which she no doubt would have dispelled had it been in her power.. Philena still considered nerself young and the gsodwssor of attractions of no mean order, which tike was willinj 1., 'hen!ay whenever t'•rerse inn y a areal tin y .00pportanity o@kred. She waa, withal, an kept beside Phi:ew.Pooh the greater part of radefatieable 'hiker. The most antiquated the time, be nosed close to Judith, ear of her aegusinancsEould not distinctly re- weu'd he Ieare her ter • mouton.' membera¢ instance when she had forejune a - As the nun declined to his 'place of setting chance to exercise her vocal member. and it and the dinning of twilight crept ire the aghast them; but no attempt was made to wits uni/elsally believed that such • circum• profound depths of the forest, Billy seemed t nave a de Ire's woth of the property ahead stance had serer been. to rise out of his apathy, and call in such of I the sante, beat. From Mies Foote we turn a moment to the his wandering senses as were marble of being Caeitnsati, June 12. unfortunate youth at her side, and whom, at excited to ac :..r :' and they appeared musty would appear, nature had cheated of some of limited to si1Lt and heanue. Seueda tl at those faculties generally accorded to the topped other ears willed hie Objects that human L.mily• His personal development eluded the sight of the keenest hunter bad was litre that of otheta of his years, there atr.nge p uliahility to bia. Ile glanced from being no deformity or visible im erteetion in point to point of the compass with the utmost structure. There wwsas,, to be sure a vues•,cy ea: ernes, or bending his head until his face official expression, inere•tico that the men- (,,,,,.dud hs Bone's mane, listened with ab - when it comes to cnnsider'blc degree but h fightm' with the redskins, it's my conviction tbe army has been indulging io pardonable we abae•t have much to depend on,'' said I platitudea about the laking of the city ; but 1 Nevcrfail, who, with '• Sure death" ,crus the should be ;uilty of withholding the truth if I failed testate aa tuna drags Mune, heavily withal, the task seems w emirate in m¢gnt tide. hfdecd, •• when we take Vicksburg" be,fis to sound like a, juke ; but like every thing els more difficult of solution, it has no pros and coca. We have beta two weeks Knocking at the gates of Vicksburg: we have down b r illery, triad to hummer them d n lea art '. I and Bull they are closed. l he labour per- formed by our troops of rho "gradual ap- sruach" is immeeset l.ou tion of rifts• its. truns field•worke fur:siege-e rte, and coveted wayssurrouud the eneumy, and frown upon hen e I': Our artillerists wale u , all til eking our i es., e p the gentlemen of the Confederate States, et &hers stud suudry times during the nigets, but net reply is Lade to uurguns. What between the she" fwm our batter. s and the thirteen inctiiers from the mortars, a cumf(ntab:e re- pose in the rebel city must be a ostler of ex- treme uucerteinty; but the oeeupants bold AR nab *10411444411 sad aaaeueeny-aa las M results can be seen, truly udnuiinble. A little work would here saved tri thta property on the Cincinnati. It is undertow! that (leer Admiral Porter did no send to tee wreck, al- though it was known that wine of the gun could have leen rescued without much risk.— The rebels a• tit yawls frum Vicksburg. and cu.•ceeded in eapturin 1 a fine Dahlgren gen, 'thick we might just et well have eared to Kae FR111011T1Oxa OF DI5C55. 11 aas ubserved that the uuderwitied grew restless and weary as the parties prugreseedt and when near night. they entered a wool more lonely and dark than any they had d d a the dey, h t bl i crctscd, Le..viD tine lace which he had nal pan of the boy was not at home. and an awkwardness of movement quite observable, bet when at rent and silent, he paced very well among those acknowledged to de more idgbly gifted. • When he attempted to con• garbles intensity of purpose. Waldron. wire lad been watering his more• m ants fur tbe lest hour, sha.k his heed du Aioosly and remarked to Neverfeil, in a low void : Tbe Coinsurers,/ has • special despatch from hdistiapole, dated the 1::h dust , wbieb aye that the neaderen of Provost Marsh•1 Steles were arrested and brought here to- day. A man was hang till almost lifeless by • crowd of excited climbs, to day, in the vicinity whe,e the murder was committed, fur aided trait nous language. A euuspany of cavalry bee been sent to Jefferson county, gndwa, to ad the email. meet. vane, re was • perp able want of cohercticy "TM boy,, ner,osnra, 7 fear, bodes us 5Iemphim, Jane 12. of thought, his sentences frequently bearing eo He h.,s • wonderful faculty, 1 The lilisaiui rias of the 4th and 5th Ito reengnizable relation to each other. altho think, of denten.. denten.. t: e proz.rnity of Indians. lest., iter the needs of the fight at fort in his dalninted mind,obnously they appeared Lnet n. be jJus eel mcollect le was aimilariy Ilwla u. Gen. Aer by Smirk drove We forces serene though out to such •• notable ex. f Gcuna (:auks in cuuftuiou, the liar tett." leasing his dead and wounded on the field.- XotwithaWding Waldron spoke in a sap Aeeording to We Aliuissippias Geu. Smith pns•ed vice, the lad turned parIs111 in his wee stilt puuaing Gen, ',nuke on tbe. 5th saddte.•nd hordes; up hs finger e.nitted a iieteet. *Airmailing, so strikieely sigunficant, an hill of warms% that Neverf el and Leawood kwood testinctioly [rasped their ricks end looked wheat for • foe "1 could wish," added Wahlroo, "that we Wert weii out of this sombre forest-tbe ;leerier, it teems to me, that 1 ever sasee- Are we not sear • spot where we ata with propriety erases" ter the eight f' Iveverl•il, to whom this interrogatory wM addressee wee not in hest" to answer. ase mused a little, like ',prudent man ; swept the dim shadows of tee silent wildenuvs with his calm eyes ; laid his rifle in an miser po.ition nems la left as, and slowly replied: "in las thee a mile from here is 1 when I've been eel•¢latin' to rune. As o• said, gov'ner, the is a dark-lookin' stn of timber, neurally fitted for an whoosh sod Limn of ohm kind. This hr bra • fames battle -ground Inc the re&kirr. The Chid. eases, Cieroke.s, and llamas have had aeon Mu o.. deep;t fight on this very alk we're *raster. ver. TheneS seely • foot of rowed here•louta, Wt Ima•'t been stained w ith header blood, owe time or another.- Ws nother-It's a peep M and nkat isn't over and above safe for lithe with .hit. eomplerwes. Iles O 11111•!111, mils from bele, i ahneldn'te ee. Ars then tion'" wwasankind among as ; rad the sort are a leerle ad in he skerry, era embarrass am Agbtin' ,sen that have pal ho do M Med and fir* and make a sueee iwl steed ague the cunning pagans; but that des peewit.» 1 s pries is born with 'em red tin s•m't help it. Toe fear there's denier, ant then w, sod it'll be lona afore there moat be danger in thw anlita,y place." "The intense semen, with the g1a shades connecter and to the poet. Ile utterance WY slow, having the characteristic drawl of his euhappy class. He was alae addicted to :he repetition of phrase* and words. empioyine them ander e.re.m.tanoem when they were mat heele- rs/it, inapplieshle, and out of place, sot on- frrevmqpue itIy with ludicrous effect Hie crippled uoderstandm; was supposed to have been in some manner induced by the influence ,i - terns upon the mother, in eensegoenre of an Indian nocturnal visit, and the sltesdine M- ediate o-edi ate of a desperate defence wed Inc. of life. This assumption remised strong confirmation le the fact that ba mind -like • kaleido. eope-retteeted fragmentary, fantastic image of ladle as, with the »goes implements tied aseamoeis which at that period justly attach- , al w them. At samosa, his issgisation teemed said them pictured obp^ts of bovvort as meld be eeeo from his pale, agitated ante ' ebeaged mune, of speaking • far it was auttsable at such times, t hr trashy laggard mprech was quickened in a continu- es. ortin. esti and harried Aew,.osatimes xr'areatory. sad not •afrequesn:y repisodial-o(ke• a eemhi,aunn of huh. Billy White was se orphan, claiming de - tar relationship with tie Waldron', who hod Woe them vain their pp^as tesla, m an act of they and 'coinages Aeoanity. Moiler Fore ked het, a fried and domestic of the We Mn Waldron, retaining her plan ani the family after that lady a deeper, •ntil she /emend to be m rentsary part of tie bosses . IleNa Yr. Waldo:» nein aced Lockwood to __ lady, m eel! as the feet of being ase imsebaeb. and some distance apvt, woad 'This youth," be add.1, pentiag to Billy, wIt the are 1 tesencsed M he %i tseuWly wed 1 in, to speak mete to the post, l should n( :IL= 001101111100110111111170011011111117111011411, and y. espreewa. Washington, June 13. The following items nee teem the Richmond papers o: the 1lth in*t:- Jacks n, Men 9th. Our scouts report them Bets around \'icks- perg are tett mites deep. Err; means of a. beach te closely guarded. 7'm• greaten care and courage arc required\it reach Vicky burg. (len. Grant communicates 4i111 the fleet by signals seen night and day which betoken les suvements. It is said that the 6nng f the enemy's mortars were heard at interna of 2 seconds right, and the tiring was nein- ned this m ung. Tree a thing new from 1'ort Hodson. A des;ateh IraoGen.Lee,dated Culpepper, June 9, slates that lien. Stuart Claire lite Fede,als huecl on that dap. The ,*ane paper states that Gen. Fitahr il lee was severely wounded, and that Col. Williams of the Borth Carolina revelry, Col. lfannpton, a backer, of Weds Hampton, and ('apt. Farley, of lieu. Stuarts star, f, were killed on the 9th mat. it Mao edmrw a inc. of rummers. The Federal Ina at Itesudy Steer is p•rioa!y ewiassed. Washington, Jen* 13. The lollnwing despatch bed been received from Neiman/4e Itel.waru --A tenderer to the privateer Florida hM ran&e Ms captures of merchant ,s ,4., of Omit she burned 4 and boarded two. 'The aptams wen merle between 7th sad fhb lore[ The following are the manse of the sere%' Metered Rask N halon(( Wind, of New York, leased with cosi for hey West Brig Mary Alvia, of Bum Figesb ergs indemnity. i -n ofRchad- ei. h, France and r *-must Japan. re' all left Naus- s were detained to eats in ease sr en- tsid«red probable. 1'011 $lljn rte ,GOl)ERICH, C.W., JU11E16,1863. LIBERALISM 'IV THE AMERICAN WAR- " Can a Liberal consistently sup- port the Southern Confederacy in is Se- cession from the L•uien. as it was ?" Thi questing has bo en propounded over and over again until it has ;sewn thread- bare, notwithstanding the fact that it has been repeatedly answered. We have serious objections to the idea no strenuously set forth that Libmis ,rebound to favor the North or lay themsdi-es open to the charge of being political renegade. On the contrary, we maintain the: the weight of argument lire in the other direction because, we amceive, it is absolutely iln. possible for the North to subjugate and hold the South by sheer force of arms without establishing a drala.tiern on the principle adopted by the Austri:la, Prns- sias and Russian of the 011 World.- Iiere.nn this continent,are arrayed against each other two enormous sections which are, as they hare been for many years, separated by natural boundaries, by habia mooting commercial thon •ht and a of e interestsThe Southern Section declares that it has the right to secede from the original Union and to set up for itself, by victiuc of the independent sovereignty vested in the rccpectire State, and on s the principle that the Federal compact L binding only' so long as the interests of the parties to it are mutual. The North refuses to listen to this,end in an evil hour she has- been 1ad t to draw the sword Induced for the purpose, apparently, ff showing to the world that even a Republic can con- sume its own vitals. If it i true that the atnt le is carried on by the S"uth for the sake of is "peculiar i-stitution" alone, which we -gave -frequently denied, it is cgtally.true that the Nath is sot fighting for the benefit of the Negro. - The Vision, intact and inditisible ! That is the motto, and., every other considera- tion is made to bend before it.. Suppos- ing the South conquered back into the Union, eh ht Wen ? It i- a Union, but oompa.ed et' what elemcne.:' A Repub- lic in natio. it would be a Despotism is priariplc, for the e,000,00,0 whites of the Swath could only be kept in subjection rri the la.int o ( the 1rr,,nrf ! Pretty Liberalian,that' Indeed,it seers to us per- fectly impo-siblc to reconcile a forced Union with a Government bused upon that foundation of individual liberty without which Republicanism would be a farce ; and nene•, we believe those who blindly sanction the ante of the Lincoln Adminis- tration are, of all others open to the charge of intolerant toryism. But, we are charged with glorying in the disintegration of the lircat Republic. This we deny. If it is to be destroyed we shall dt polnre iia downfall, which, ifl permanent and complete, would be a loan to the civilised world. Anil by whom hs it been imperiled ? We hesitate not to say, By Mr. i'resident Lincoln and hie advisers. The South Si one man, woman and child new' up and :eked to be let out of the Union under wide%) they felt they could not ennleninl(y line in the fullness of the time foreseen by1)c9 oognevilte,W stet, Clay, Jefferwwi, and, it is finely be. hewed, Giorgi! Washington himself, this conclusion wan arrived at. Could Mr. !Anode expect to avert what Wad seen by so ntlny wise men certainly Iodating up in the future ? Could he hope b rink the oil andwaterof direr,* inters ls-- enuld he weer together sections forever separated in feeling ' in the very nature of things he nvuhl not ' and in a horribly rash moment he readied to bridge over the gip with the awned. Khat mold the awned do ? 1t might have reached the ewe of the trouble, had the " Rebellion turned upon the efforts of • few fanatical leaders, moth u have eve been %tend rttsdy to hateh (rearm, but when a whet* f nple with • ussaimity .hied awnwmawd'd the rrtgw't of the world, declared that they near twine, mud the scord, da mesh, 1. War out 7i dig • liberty. blinded ape, have hu policy his cuun- or without ,000 of ho- bs meriaoed, lie +tau the Uniou.- hat home's have won r It has uoob's awe at at --it d to - haste nr instead would be or each, with- nou of the iustitu- tuent. the view of the subject .Signal frim the very first the Revolution, and especially when the diaoovery was made that the people of the South were unaaimoua in demanding what they considered a diseo- thrahuent from the general government. - How theu can we, as professed Liberals, refuse to admit that the South by the indomitable bravery of her sono --by her patriotic self sacrifice -by her nuc -est dl endeavor to bear up under tremendous difficulties -has earned for herself the rights of a new-born Nation -a Nation " for good or for evil ;"-or how can we oonri •Wetly doubt !or a moment that her claim to rec- ognition, oo-oguition, as such, is `• a Presence not to be a is likely to be reemeed enerptrad. But there is a danger to which we ars emitted jest now, and te which we desire to draw special ctteatiuu. It crime from the owe•aEdens of Returners. Bo resod is the opposition to the return of Cartier, Macdonald and Galt to power, that our hietda aro apt to imagine test in every county they are sure of susses, end /69 - Orel We weatta by which alone victory eau be accuxed.--Wel» elMenduc. Who says the Negro can't Tight 1 The New York Toitrwe qualm a para- graph in which the following •eeiseec oecurs,to show that the Negro esti and will fight: "One negro was observed with • rebel soldier in his grasp, tearing the Mesh front bis fere with has teeth, other weapons having tailed hem. Thenar are other incideata cnu- rected with the conduct of this regiment teat Aar raised rhea eery muds in tar oyietoa soldiers." put by !" Such a co of reasoning se this may be distasteful to many who believe the ultra-abolitionaa of the North are all they prrtead to be, and to others who particularly admire Mr. Lincoln, but he /unsure there, and we have never yet seen a sober, serious attempt to deny thorn. - After all has been said, however, we candidly believe that as Canadians we are comparatively disinterested in the struggle and that it is for us, according to knowledge we purses, to -form a calm, de- liberate judgment irrespective of any part claims whatever. This seems to be th right course, and what is more, the majori ty of our people hare adopted it. Ou knowledge of the war u derived almos exclusively from Federal sources, and through Federal channels, which, unfor- tunately, hare fallen sadly into the habit of mendaciously representing black to be white, and )'et, fully se 're -tenths of the Canadian people, torics and Reformers alike, have armed at the conclusion that the South has a right to rec>gnition as a x r ate Republic. It may be that Shes4 Pa P people and those Reform einem who are of this opinion are in the wrong, bit that `krNaiis Inc be Loren ! . the 7 c Brave Darkey-ma, ificent cannibal - if you can be found you should be pre - muted with a medal bearing on the reverse "lovely " skull and wares buses' "- This is a capital cowmeooement,attd when the regiments now being formed get fairly at work, we may expect to see such an amusing item as the following in the New York papers : " Ludicrous scone -a pretty mess --Today Capt. Cutemop of the 12th Bloodaudwurder hangers, o0 coming into camp from a reconnoisuce, scented something unusually savory about the fires. Ou making enquiry of his brave colored boys, one of them, with a grin, informed him that they were making up a famous stew of rebel babies, and that Sambo,eook- inchief, was superiotendiug the roasting of tlueee beautiful young rebel ladies. The worthy Captain thereupou sent a dispatch to hindquarters to record upon the page of Immortality this, another instance of Ethi- opian bravery." Seriously however, we think twenty or thirty thousands of blacks will prove a valuable area to the Federal'. Suppose, for insance,the sacking of a city; what material better for the purposes of VERT LATEST WAR NEWS. LEN IN PENNSYLVANIA INTENSE Eyl'1TEMENT. We have startling news from the War. The whole of Lee'. army, or a large por- tion of it, has adraneed up the Shenan- doah Valley and capered Pennsylvania, driving Hooker before him-. The Federal, made a steed at Winchester, but evacuat- ed after losing 2,000 men. Ou Monday night the Confederates were at Martins- burg, Penn., far to the North of Washing- ton. The President hu called for 100,- 000 fresh men to serve for six mouths. - The people of Peuusylvania are said to be perfectly panic-stricken. The whole character of the movement will appear in a few days. Social Llfe in England. 1t is • taarkek feature of social life in Keg - laud, sod ce1taiuty one of its special charms, nkat mutters and daughters are so uniformly seen together at their own home. Nut only is abs mother the first body to whom you are introduced at the first house where you visit, but retreat of the ceremweiee throughout; nut only does she preside at the dinner -able, but in the evenia:g party she sits as queen. - Whatever may be your first impreesion of etch en arrangement, -if it heppena that your sympathies are with the younger ladies, you will very soon learn to think teat the mother's shoetree reed be very sincerely regretted by the daughter As a Picture, al meat admit the arrangements* to be perfect. fbe portly haw and matronly lenity of the mother are an exquisite full to the youthful beauty end maiden cuyneat of the daughters. And you will find nothing to mar„but every- thing to enhance the interest of the picture. Tbe mother's presence never seems to oper- ate s an unwelcome restraint Between her and the daughters you will mark the moat joyous, playful, loving freedom, without the sacrifice of • title of parental digaily and authority on the one baud, ur'of sweet and graceful filial duty on the other. 1t maybe said of English fealties generelly, that tese two things are eminently characteristic, to wit, undone parental authority, and the most charming freedom of iutereourve between parents and their children. Yea cannot visit an Eugleh family in • frillier way without discovering what will possibly surprise you. that a deep dislike of c.remouy and sate is • very marked characteristic of au English au - man. This feature is atrongeM in those high- rerfa•, arson, infant and women murder sat in rank, and has been a harked feature ut and hellishness generally ! What though the character of tee Queen herself from ber girlhuol. Now that she is a widow, and her children are growing to the stature of rue hood ante womanhood, and leaving their home forever, how delightful to recall the sweet pictures of her early married lire, when see much loved to saunter with her noble husband, over the beach near their beautiful house in M the Isle of Wight, and to watch those then the whole civilised world should turn in .shuddering disgust from the scene--” The Union con and must be sustained ! ! " COOL 111PaiTtVIM CIL-The Clinton ELECTION NEWS. Mr. Notmtn has been ehcted in North Wentworth, contrary to the expectations alibi opponent:'. Wase ELGIN is all right. Mr. Sdwblc has been elected by a majority of 31. aoNomination for the T xro -eAt the Norm t 0 Western dirks.' es, Mr. McDonald had a decided majority. Success to him. Five Candidate were nominated for Toronto East. QrIstc City is sound. Hon. Mr. Thibaudcau (President of the Council) had a majority at the close 4 284 in Quebec Cents', and Mr. Alleyn 087 in Quebec West. MEMBERS ELECTED. t'rrca CANADA. Cornwall. -J. S. Macdonald. Caen;are'.—I). A. Macdonald. South Ilaatings.-Lewis Wallbridge. lambton.- Alex. Mackenzie. youth Wellington. -1). Stirton. H..mi!on.-Isaac Ituchanen. South Ontario.-Q4iver Mowat. Huron and Brum-lames llicka,nn. West Northumberland. -James Cockburn. North ianark.—Robert Bell. lineeln.-Wm. Mc(iiverin. South Simcoe.-T. Ferguson. Fist Elgin. -i.. Burwell. Est Elgin, -John Scoble. North aeotworth.-V 15. Notman. Ministerial 14 Opposite -mats 0 Liberal Conservatives l.owca CANADA. Quebec Fut.—Huot. Areentuil.-J. J. Abbott. iherb,00ke.-A. T. Galt Nootreal hast. -G. E Cartier. Montreal West. -T. 1). McBee. Montreal Centre. -Joffe loss. Champlain. -J. J. Ikea. ile^ille.-Alec. Deftest*. I.ntbiniere.-Jolt'. • St. Hayeiothe.-I.. V. Sesotho. Terrebonee.-1 ehreche Vrger. Pontiac.-Poupore. lbmowki. Sylvain. Quebec C.ounty.-- Kyr rel. Three Ri,en.-Tsreot(e. (jnebee Centre,-Thibardesa. Quebec West.--Alleyn. Compton. -Pope. Ministerial 10 t )ppositeenw 6 Liberal Conser,stine 1 THE CONTEST! Today we add b lid two more mince of etanneh fri of tipper Canad- ian rights -Mr. Neiman and Mr. Stehle. the returns stand runtime to one I Wm shall add very largely to the lid to -day and Io -morrow, and we an not think the C1r- repbioniw will get say of there. There ean he no doubt that the friends sf Upper Canadian rights are ,beet to Weep the nnontry In very many mine tis warmly twmtereil I661, their op. patents are smash to bring est eadi- datsia while Mr. Fergwwn is the oily supporter of the Coalititos who baa base Vaasa dentin. Bootie. --Mr. dell anaeunese 64, rertierweut i. wow eo:eru that 6e in about offering far sale by sootiest a Iargb stock of tuiseellaitc is books. The stuck. is an imeselaec use, and comprises many rare woofs, which are seldom nisi with Is. the regular book stone. Whether they will sell its (i(rderiuh remains to be sae,. The brat sale takes place this (Friday). everting. BAZAAR. The Ladies of St. George's Chunk' will 1 opou • Bazaar for the sale of Fancy and useful articles in Crabb'. 11 all on Wednee day and Thursday, 24th and 25th init. Itcfreihments will be provided for those ' gallant enough to partake of them. We nope the members of the Chureh sad aB' favorable to it will petruuiae the Bazaar in a haudaume manner. The proceeds will be applied towards the erection of the Pursousge. DIST We respectfully decline publiahieg the not very coherent effusion of " 80,000 coeds," mach as it would please us to give room for such a double distilled concentra- tion of wisdom as the name would seen) to indicate. 1f "lis " remarks happened to stir up the " worser " feelings of said " souls " they will please follow the ex- ample of the philosophical Ethiupian- "grin and.':bear tt." The matter dos not affect the interest of our readen. Da-ta•tTlc.-The tl3eatrieal perform- ances going on almost every evening in our town, under the direction of Mr. Simooe Lee, are said, by those better acquainted with these things than ourselves, to be superior to anything of the kind that has been brought upon the boards of the Dramatic 1411 for a long time. Crowded houses have been drawn every eveuing,and the fascination is still incrtfaiing. Mr. Lee is, it seems, an author as well as an artist, and hie new piece entitled " Bat at his own Game," is highly spoken of. Courier trying te lecture the Sigsal and little children as they amused themselves with Free Press for daring to think for them- trying to find two pebbles of the same ,bappe., or dib wells in thesand with their 0ny wr000lr11 selves ou the American War. In its child- .p•dee. Was abs nut a great deal h•{ r like simplicity it imagines thought should amid those tweet domestic scenes titan run entirely in party channels, or s is the wthhee ngsurrodunstadedteuwitccaaio,ah giittenng nobilityn on '• - Ikmsl Re- case with is,no. elf,be inspired by the admirers ,ran of .Abraham Linooln. When the (warier gets off the fence, it will be time enough Hugh Miller's First Perusal of the to point out what stand political paper. Poems of Burns - should take at any ,abject. 'Twas late that evening ere 1 reneemhered ---- that 'us customary t6 spend at lent partof Cultivation of the -White Sean. the night in bed- 1 read oh anon, .it a W _ stilt inereaing astouehment and light, laugh - For yea, we have earnestly adiocated the ing and crying by tarns. 1 was quite in a more extensive cultivation of the white bean new world./ all wasfresh, u¢swled—tbe s a field cVop on _tinenrnu Farms. thoughts, the descriptions, the images—s it •The great need uf American agriculture is the volume 1 read were tthe first that had ever ever • good "fallow eros "-some plant that will beeu wrnteo , attd yet a stand our hut, dry summers. enrich the soil, sal, and appealed with a truth anti force irre- and allow the we of the horse hoe to clean ssalte to the recollections 1 cherished most the lad during its gruwth. A plent,in short, that shall occupy the Mme place as the turnip does in English agriculture. ^ 'The white bean comes nearer to this than any other plant tet introduced. If the bears a.e consumed on the fano-s turnips always are in England -their cultivation would add t» still, to most curs Inc scaffolding secto- g. 'materially to its fertility. There ma be no ed nn:orporated with the structure which A duebt on this point. All the leguminous. hid se^cd to rear; std thour'h certainly aro plants -including clover, peaa,vetches, beans, ne'aff "'dins could be raised on serer pnnci etc. -contain large quantities of nitrogen, and Plea 1 could have wished that the ineenumt, 'this when eonsumed by animals or plowed which bar been tasked to erect it had been under n converted n rte smr it gonia -the veru exerted a little further in tering it down - thing which we moat need for the growth tit But the work before Inc was cvideutly the the of • gmn gater artist • not a fro - ht tie then crow beans No crop will rent cereals. production rent of the scatfulding remained—not so •pay bette-.' when rices are, good, s et much as a mark M.bow how it had been con- structed. The whole seemed to have risen an e respect an exhalation,d in this Pect re ed me of the structures of Shakespeare alone. 1 read the inimitable ' Twa Doge Here, 1 a met me at Nature ria fondly. \at ret .rad Scott 7 com- positions polished every turn. 1 heel admired the pol of lupe, and Gray, and Collins, though 1 could not sometimes help feeling the, with all the etiquette art they had de - played, then was a little additional art want - present, they c:a be sold; and if prices fall they can be fed out o0 the farm with adven- age. In regard to their cultivation we have writ- ten so much in previous Semmes that little said. a the full and perfect realize ten of what need be riot at this time. They are gen. Swift and 1)r'dcn were handy enough to at - entity ,erown on wenn, light roil, but will tempt but lacked genius te accomplish. - succeed on ahtmst any soil it properly cultiva- ted For this. as for all othercrope,the land ahuu!d be well under drained, either naturally or artificially. The land may be plowed in the fall and agent et the snnn • end mode Here are dogs -bona fide dogs-mndowed. indeed, with more than Metre sense and ob- a•rvanon, but true to character se the mast been and attached of quadrupeds, in ever, Fuse. And then these exquisite touches which clean and mellow before planer ; or a clover the poor man, inured to a life of toil and por- ted may be turned over,and the beans planted easy, can alone rightly understand and those at once. The common "white mednum -' a deeply based remarks on character, which generally considered ole most productive ata only the Vhdosopher can Justly appreciete-.- riet , but the White Mountain or Manow This is the true catholic poetry which addrtia- rieldi nearly nr quite as well, and brings a ea itself not to any little circle, walled in '~basso 2 t 2 3 better price. It it • little Iarger,roandeepduM, from the rear M the species Ey some peeuliv mash 4 1 Cralg per and handsomer, and is gaining in popular iq of thou int prejudice or cnndiaion, but d,pen 3 1 It. P. O'Connor 3 1 Furze 3 0 taxon 5 0 ENIGMAS. I am composed of 8 letter. y ran, 6, 8 e an article of dress, ' 5, 3, 2, 1, 7 is a wonian's name, ' 4, 6, 7 is a kitchen uteri!, " whole .1 an auimd. 11. i am composed of 13 letters.' My 2, 12, 8 a • nickname, 1, 6, 5, 7, 4 is the end and aim of massy, " 13, 10, 3 is air animal, " ,e, 11, 7, 8 ubeuld be reveled, " whole is a prwarb. Report of the B.ille Practice ea W 13th Jaae, 1561. 5,1 1.mM Mgt .1 weer Recuse .. Chit441 chaa R.l.•ra a. Walter Hosea e.ph 0'1 ow.. t roved I ...pot Craw Rua 11. P. esrra Meas Fame .5 Or•aai teas. Waimea V arhea n..Srmres w. Cellar It t'krraa a.N Tnnn"w y —,i; • a e • • • 1 11 11 1 J• 1 • li • a • r • . m . 1 1 a m Id 1 1lsssnnn• re 4 N• • 4 v t 5 e 1 11 5 1 • T • 1 11 It • 1 It 1 1 • e 1 • a 1 e a 1 n • t M 1t 1 1 4 a •' 5 • a N • It le II T • • • 1 51 .1• e, u M e at v (11:171 m s ell r• 1 • • el a 1 • 1 s e 1 e ern • —•1l rM Ye at lea et, . ee e w,1 PWEEP.a'ratiss.-160 rade Awet_s 0 C R No. rat( 1(..-er Po.ata Mule Tbetepeen 6 0 0 10 O. J. Walker 4 0 0 R t Kirk 2 1 0 7 2 McPherson 1 3 0 x 11- PIan 4 0 1 If 0. Gardener 1 3 R 2 McLean 4 0 14 1 1t Walker 5 e 10 0 Psawmre 4 0 8 1 13 0 7 5 11 0. 13 0 5 1 12 0- 6 2 ' 10 0 A advt... 5 0 10 0 Me 'tooth 4 I 11 0 Clea' 4 0 R 1 refresh 3 f 13 0 Mnehell 1 1 1 It 1 Wm. (tardier 1 0 0 2 4 Wallace 5 0 0 10 0 Clarke 3 0 1 10 1 34111a 4 0 0 R 1 Rob,n.on 0 0 0 0 6 esteem. They may be planted in hills 21 feet apart, and 15 to 18 inches apart in tbe rows, drop. ping 5 to 6 beans in each hill; or they Slay be drilled in with $ machine, in rows 21 feet apart, and a single bean 2 inches apart in the nowt The latter, perhaps gives the larger crop. but the former requires leas labor in hoeing. etc. in the section they are usually planted the first week in June.-(i'ewessee Former. Hay and Hay -Mating. The Ohio Farmer makes the following sensible relnarka : As the season for making hay is approach- ing, we will give • few words of citation ,in advance. Don't dry your hay too mucb.-e Hay may be dried till it is as worthies as straw. As a rood coffee maker would say, " Don't burn wear coffee; but brown it," so we say don't it y your hay, bat core it. Our good odd mothers, who relied on herb tea in- stead of 'potecary medicine,' gathered the herbs, when in blowiest, and cured them in the shade. The is the philosophy of making good hay. Cut it in ole bloeom and cure it in the shade. Tbe sugar of the plant, when A is in bloom, is in the atoce ready to form the seeds. If the plant is cm earlier, the seers not there ; if pater, the sugar hail be Mime converted into • woody macer. Hay shoved be well wilted in the son, hot eared in the cock. Netter to be • little too green than too dry. If, on putting it into the horn there is danger of ' heating in the mow,' ion sow salt. Cottee will like it none the peat, light and dry winds, will soon take than Burch and suer, which constitute the (oodnew of hay, out (OA; and with the .d. deem of showers, render it almost worthlea Oras eared with IM least experts is to the drying wind* and scorching nannhine, is more out mines than if lougmy eat however good the weather may be. f seer sired, it metaire more woody fibre and lets nutritive madam. The tree sot of he; making, then, enemata in teittia1 the (res Fan the starch and sugar are meat filly developed, sad beton they am convened into sed .04 woody fibres; earl erre it up to the point when it .ill answer to pet it into the bars without heating,aad ne mere. oto far from than being seythiwg a the neMinerne of penia neurally kindred ts either vies or misery, i1 a treated of lighined love, sae bappinsas. the whole human family. I read on. Holy Fair.' ' llallowee'n.' 'The Address to the Dell,' engaged me by turns; and then the strange, uprorious, unequalled ' O-ath and Doctor Hornbook.' This, 1 said, is something new in the literature of the world. Shoksoenre permed shove all men the pow. er of instant and yet natural transition -from the lightly e57 to the deeply pathetic, from the wild to the humorous; but the opposite sated of feelings which he induces, however close to the neighborhood, are ever distinct and separate ; the 011 and the water, though contained in tbe same vessel, remain apart Here, however for the first tines, they mix and incorpc rate, and yet each retains its whole nature and full effect. 1 need hardly remind the reader that tbe feat hes been repeated, and with even more completeness in the won derful ' Tam o'Shaar. 1 read on. The 'Cotter's Saturday Night' filled my whole soul: my heart throbbed, and my eyes moist• ened: and never before did 1 feel half so o roud of my country, or know hell' se well on whet score it was 1 did best in feeling proud. i had perused the enure volume, from begin- ning to end, i remembered that 1 hal not taken supper. and that it wmore titan time to go to bed.' Immense Immigration from Larepe- From the N. V wrnag Pmt. More than 4,000 emigrants arrived at this port yesterday from Orneryand Great Brit • The ships whisk brothem were as follows :- Name n(Vemet Itis 1rn. et IIaigruate Steamship !Isar Bremen. -......646 City of Saltiest:me Liverpool 6N Ship Oder Handier( 136 Ship Prince Albert ....Hamburg. 396 Ship Victoria [rondos 88 Ship E. W. SMYoa....Inwndne 111 Ship ROMI M .. Liverpool 715 Ship Ellie Arne Liverpool 852 /ship American Urdu ... Liverpool 681 Total 4,171 The Bakes prmesgcrs, wombsrirg Rome hundreds more. are sot invaded in thefts Seers* Tbw English papers for some time past has. crwrrnentsd epee the ersaally vapid .mtgrstln. f'l'am Ireland, and the •novaese pmssager lists of the Liverpool paetea show that their seseemeate were not .crtgerrted. As the .mersaiy0 shiploads arrive, tkm m61- granM are shot set sp.m sur .hareeyaed any •aeralag ea ern sones er»enwrie of new he- dge them may he sen enslaving •reend tbe $mlgra t depot os rim Betel. The following were the winners at the re- spective ranges, the tin having fired off : 300 yds. -1st, G. Graham ; 2nd, Costead ; 3d, Ilogg. 200 yds. -In, Horton ; led, Roses; 3d, Watson. 160 yds. -1st, Devisee 2nd, Cooper ; 3d, l'I•tt. Tan5osAL TO DM rat ttsaxsraaaa • Roam. - There is a hot and violent controversy going on jurat sow literary and datle circlet about the ptr r&m at* of moving Shake- speare's bones. Next year, in April. it is proposed to celebrate the bicentenary a the poet's birth, and it a urged that the would be a fitting occasion to make a solemn ceremony of digging ap his mortal remains, in order that has pnnenty might satisfy themselves about his stature the shape of bei head, and so forth. The objectors, on the other handt profess to be shocked et the bare idea, and declare that they will bet» no hand in apro- ceeding that might bring down apes thai heads bbs care which Shakespeare permeate edepos any or .bo sheer vesture to die erh hie boas, its agreed again that Shakapeare Myer ordered that tnsenption t0 he pat ,pis his tmnr, het Ibat it was merely a lamb he *trireme n( the sextons and stone -evens o< the period. What is to be the end of *be matter 1 do not know; bet i Ihisk they had better let Shakespeare Iia -(Lowden Coe. .f Aberdeen Prom. A little girl about nine years age•, who nes being conducted to the lunatic Asylum. at Amherstbergh, was left for .s ' _ charge of the gaoler of this town (Sandwich) lipoe aittiag &owe to the ably if sushi leam Ism bkmi fM lady i.Moharge el MM as tis gaol replied that As might ate tat he li • Way I au m.e0Mg y' d. Hale •st6rMaeay Me 'Ae mother trod re to 4n »n.' This .b Lg p erre the dere ;terraria. ad mw a aNf'. i - lip, ninnies the,, hold even elle reaaaa Ian fen her throw. Mother t ark e lhia