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HomeMy WebLinkAboutSemi-Weekly Signal, 1864-09-30, Page 6•t1 ..= futon 2SIgna1. - GODERICIL. C. W., OCT. 4, 186.1. BLOOD 1101,LEY. AT THE 'close of the recent .Assize.s, Mr. Jestice HagartY, ho bears --the thin -de -ter of a high-minded- Christian gmtletitan well exthat of an able eipounder and ad- . . mmistrator of -British law, characterised the Price received for White Men by crimps and recruiting .agents as km/ 'Money. -Never was the term more fit- tingly employed, -for every' man of sensi- bility inust tura from -the inhum•an ly andtsilently upon the wild rocks a sombr il hemlocks in the foreground, wit aesolit, ry crane, the sole tenant of -those due'ey ,ades, is. very effectively introduc- ed, aiii adds to the 'still Solitude; while it gr.eat1j enhances th-c 'deep -toned- • coloring of the vhole'pictere. - Another -Canadian view d -mending particular notice is the light -h Use on the Igle of Coves -L -the - • lig1if-11 • -use bet eg. delicately pencilled in l fbregro tid. ; This -picture k light, airy, a -the di: ance with -floWer-pot inland -for- a , • _ . . . , nd }It is ile I &cut I PR ISE ant -111d of Anna:There, and is floe con- - . hetet a. to styhle with the one wehave just -notice evincing, in a marked manner, the veritiIity of the artist's pencilWe believe llthit this painting -Wag produced from a oeiemal-sketch taken on the spot • - by our worthy -County .Tudev tbe arcs of. h#c with the same loat in.- that every free- -- - . • . man manifests whem a heartless informer k wre---occasionally relieved b; nhose laborions office we are ° a fewlad to ote . of other person has been found guilty in - • • .1 the eyes of society of having dabbled scatteetal hetes euatched from his harrashe the blood ofa. felloW-being for the sake of mOney. Old countrymen, and especia,lly Irishmen will understand wliat Wt. mean. - • hi. . They will remember how in theirliwn.dihope s- 1.nd su • - - tracted -land thfi e receiver of bleed -money ()esteem is loaded with infamy even j.f ho does no • in p worse than receive pay for delivefing up which tothe gallows one proscribed by the laws. hi -hi -tie -it Arm much moie intense should be min lie wou. ing jud fivatio urch of cud_ duties and devotedto the cal- _ aud enjoyment of therefined-pleas- is pencil. *We eau -only now es- press hat the learned gentleinan may cient leisure forthe re.produchOn of his pleasing shetches from nature re elaborate' atid permanent- forte dat grace the walls of the next Ex- t London, where, we feel confideni; _ occimy a, distinguished position . feeling ofhoiror at tbe scenes being trans-Yanunte antatetweeelmoag MrCresswell's•A* ileigs„ eot Cana-Rim subjecth, which -stated- day after day at our very doors. -L, it 'White men; guilty of no crime- greater eellhdth thainivers'a cost mendittione was an White e.pieture Of the Dower Stchme near than a complete iamorance of. the depth ,t): hau .hreee in Devonshire. If, hs.Sh-akes- :s us, sermons are te behfound in aaredly this mass Of gray ihnestone nily wallies veteran viene sertred sears of ages from the bosom of a,n moorland, and with '• _looks _com-: with.:tha skies," is preenant with ofdegradation of which huneatf nature is _ . pare te capable„are followed by insiduous kidnap- stone, pers, wheedled, seduced, treated in filthy fish' nithihe bar.roorns, and, when at Iast awakened ..Iti, ;Hsi' from the stttpor -caused by vile .. alcoholic .1wreing compounds or drugs; diseover upon their- Al°[41 w dole ofthe highesf order, We know Of eo Sul :ectiu nature su fell of fine sentiment . limbs. thc garb of federal eoldiera, :and, . . r- so ster •estive of deephellectieiase as a shlit above their heads the glorionSiag ofhry hock. ising in grim-grendemeauch as is• here eautititi y delineated . ' • e liberfy, , And as they are marched *off b to , . varying- . Ith - evei express' n as the hghte and shadows pass the place where they are to be thrown 'int° aeross h picturesque form, -.with the lichenS =marked graves, the wretches who have fimbieticelly grow -hie tip freer its grotesque . received the ieinted btood money retire ;to. hrevicee had hoary scare; suggest . a constant. successiten of imaeinary shapes and fanciful • thew native brothel's there to recount- their eisennenhaces, the woedeeful beauty of whim' exploits, and to plan further conqeests:! Tine he areis h has taleiirubly ettbodied in- this is no fancy pieture. , EVery town in.Canada is xquistte, pictute, 'which realizes tharuelibtit leeied upon. Even from the vie:Laity. - of his thonehgh appreelatien of the tnysteriouely Clinton, a few ds ago, some thirteen youne- age-esti& pusher•of thee:subject. • men wereindnced by the dealers iii White -Mach is we have alwaysndmired.Mr..Cress- . men toenterthe service of Mr: Lincoln, and veil's. WnterwItws, wethink thatat the- late What was the result? -. Every one or teeth 8xli-ibithin he has even excelled all his former- orts, ahd perhaps thisin.ay be attributed to Waltheated out ofhis bn, otley:. Some a' he more than eine' fireeh that be. has (riven peoplemay laugh ansay, " -----------erved there' 0 . . . hem. _ I iShiew. cif the Little Currant, north • right for not being Sharperso. but. we put h4 - f -- the -Qreat Manitoulin, with ' Le Cloche • more genets tate upon it and unhesitatm-gly _Mountains in the background, ii the best and - declare our belief thet ' before God and -mai. Wrist carefully finishedpecture we have seen - ` - their sedecers are guilty of the murder. -o .' fi° 63.11:'s ..Pe_neil while the 4Palle' neatDun. '=- • des ' and a scene neat the -Depot of. *he every one of them that fails in battle: Hudson Ll'ay-Company oh the Sault St. Siii...rie: Ohe'ye-Southrene i- ye have need- to fall eatly.sustain the high opinicii we have hither - prostrate- before your: household shrines and pi' formedot his excellence in water cut-hrs. innoke aid from the -God of battles ! Enviroa • 1Ve are glad that all these picture's hese been tid by dangers on every hand, .beset by Pur°hase4' hv. gentlemen resident at Getleiieh, where th y will be permanently located. - and difficulties enormous enough to appal the . Within th -. itech of all who can adtiaire' 'the stoutest hearts, ye are opposed not only Ihy . 4 beautifal in art. .. foenumerically superior, but fretri . al . We sli uld also refei to Mr. C.'i steeesful - mostevery nation tinder -He -even, nten whom. efforte ii tattle,and in Instorical and marine you have never injured in any shape: or form.le_aintingenead ot Winch departmente he ear- - . . . Tied On' fireepremiume, but as he illiends ex - are gathered up and told to denieliebe your s ehibiting 4gain. at the Union Exhibition intim homesteads, trample down your fields, exter- Chrystal. Pelaee at Tot onto, - whieli will be initiate 'oar sohliere. and drive your deteecee open to Morrew and on Thursday) We shalt less Women ' and children into hopeless .enile.h. reserve onr observations until the result of ' Ineontests between man and man • there' ish' this further etimpetitiore which, We have -IIQ. . dfb-uht,,, ‘11,1 fillip sustain -Bomethitig. Approaching' to a cocle of honor the favor he has but in war the eiant encases Iiimselfia armor , e O -recentty acqUired atla.n.iilton. : - in order that he may go forth fa slay the half- Why ;lie ICipp,In Match was not - armed stnpling. We trust -our readers .*...will., pet young men on their guard agaipst - the . • Advertised, - muhinationt of thereceiversof bloodniameg..! - L. _ , , TO. tie Et4tor of the Harm?. Signq : Z1L 'CRESSWELL'S PAINTINGS 4..t , s*,HWill•yoti please give. e plitceiri• your . r - THE PROVINCIAL EXTTIBITIONexlleartljoernal te e few remarke in .refer-• -1 1 ence to the manner in which the meithers of . The letter of our special correspondenti the: .Ehprieia Cradling.and. Bet:Ping 8ociet; _ atiramilion; Published in oiar last- issue have beea treated by the Glebe ? The Direr- promptlyannounced Mi. Cressn'ell's dis,-1 t°,rs of tkat seciety concluded that, as the Globe hada very :extensive circulation, and tinguished sue -cess in the dqmpetition a.• t especially well patronized: in this:: sectien of .the Exhibition held last_ week•;.. but as ye i i • tap country, it would be the- best paper t0. had the gra,tificitione of a careful inspec-1 advertise, n, and accordingly gave -orders to tion of these admirable works of art beforat the secretary to. send a coPy of the Rules and their removal from pie County, we . are lleztilatie zee be inserted in that paper, with , , - unwillinglolosethe 'opportunity of adveft- one donee to pay. for insertion, which .proh g to them Somewhat more indetail., - , would - . . in The ably net occupy more than ten lines o eminent position which Mr. C. maintains',. Prini, butItheadverthement did not appea . _ . "--F in the q/dbe. The secretary seut them a as an artist in the:Province is very prop-;- - - . Tater reT,ieSteng -an explanation, -, and to re erly a sonrcecif nuelfprideto this County., ..! 7 turn the money, but neither explanation no It is something for us to say, that-strug- money caite. Now, Mr: Editor, as our pen ' gling as - we still are in subduing. the has failedito command attention iri that office, primeval forest, Mid depriVed. by oui.,-1 we have eeneluded to apply toyen to publish k the wienytwhich we ha.ve suffered. We would scanty resources from(' participating in net think o bad of it, but manywho - take many of the .1tiauiica efeivilized, life, we that pepe and Weald -like to. have been at the competition heard nothing of it until it was are in constant and familiar intercourse evers. ' It. may be that some accident hap - with the foremost Master in art, by eni- pened, orehothlettere went astray; if so, this .-wersal acknowledgement, „that. the - Prov.- -Paruset Tail to -meet their eyes, and they will J.'. at leest send us an explanation, but. if they ince has yet produced -one. whose refineck- take no noticeof this, we must quietly submit to a woong, and we will know for the future what paper to advertisein. '.. - • • By order of the Director* : THOS. WILSON, Seg., , • Kippeue C. W. : a 11E4 :-7-While we think the Globe men...tinder-stand- their own interests too 1 well to withhold such an .,adveitisenient intentionally, the above letter furnishes its With a text for saying a'word on the sub:. , ject of general advertising in this section. The first Objectin publishing a notice of such a titing as the • Kippen • Cradling -Match is publicity -to .niake the matter well-known.ainongst those interested, and to swami- Such an object we dahlia that the County Paper is justly entitled to- cOnsideration, even in a business point of view. The proprietor of the -Signal spares neither pains nor expense in ith, effort to produce alfirstpclass local paper; and his labers are so far rewarded that the jour- nal has now a larger bona fide- circulation sin ak.p.tcrts of the counties than at any former _period _ef its existence, and its range of influence is constantly Widening,. t, - hrough the kindness of disinterested fifriends, that now we have the satiafach tiOn:ofknowing that any important .fact published, in Our columns is .absollitel"ll sure -to spread through the whole extent Ofthe Counties. : Advertisers know this, - - ' hence the liberal . patronage we. receive. TJIE SEMI -'WEEKLY 1 SIGNA_L. ot only right but,behl, :under the tstances, to SUPPORT 1163IE ENTER - N TICES OF -PUBLICATIONS. /laic 111-ont1vili.-:-The October *No. markably good tine in Our eitima- Admirers of Enelish literature will - • . sed with "...Charles Lamb's Uncil- ritings," " Madame Reca.meur " 11 -written and interesting paper, and re several other -articles possessing erit. Ticknor & Fields, the pub- is a tion.' be-ple lt_3et911 is aw there reel lisher the p to (-hon. money) _per year. THE - AME IGAN WAR. Niseellaneous Paragraphs; ilja Penny oinnibuss s have been started NEW Yolk Oct ier 2. -The Herald's . Wilt artily -corps ear espondent says ot the in Landon. - res • operations, tiat the corps in advance on CDo the best yeu can. If you are only Itichinondehfcike camp at 3 p. m. on the 28th a street -Weeper, sweep your best. and by a rii-pid maich reached and crossed -the Ce,- Women ean keep a secret, but it -gen James river it daylielit on the 29t1i. At Deep i ,erally takes a good many of them to do it. 13ottom immediately ' on advancine they met I. / . , , 0 Et5im Old Cranky' says, if any man third ES acmes fields afire -at. Pew 'Market road. This es -...Why are black eyes called piercing y road was-oceppied lak the enemy, strongly Because they can- 'look daggerls -when they 11., entrenched oil thehe glits. " The ad vabee ob- , , . -e- stinately, contested! t le position, _which in rendered doubly .forir idabld by lamest ever impenetrable • elaehil r that covered the .Tecruton.A.MT itil_wpyuarse without money is Vetter tha n ..,_ y 4 fellows in the ? Because they are _art atroon'Itmbee:11.Gernians tbe heavie additiou to its named] y strong -charaeter wassi e V."' i the eireiny.) eki -mished roads -and rebellion a nice thing, let him get -married. , have been eompelled. to advance si'Ves'. . .c°1°r° treepa under Genera Pain were -ordered -carry the position a heed -without brains; the firstmaybe filled Their charge wits on of the giand features the other can't ! - • of the operations of t e day. They never flj. No pains' willbe spared, as the Quack Et nbu'rgh, 1?eviclo .fer gely opens with ari int resting review of Foster's Life of Sir I\ A limely.article on Q open 'S English," but extremely 'unfair in its assumption of Colonial ignor: mice nd hick, of.refinement. 3. A com- pleter View if the -Great Postal iteforni. 4. 'Th History of our Lord In. Art. Engli,:1 Horses... 6*. 'Public. Schoo1iz`4 some w rat threadbare subject. 7. Life of Edwaid Livingstone. • 8 Pc ILossi"s Christ an and -Jewish Inscriptions. 9. Eugen e Le Guerin. 10; The Three Pastor s. Republished by h. .geott & 00, New ork. Lon ion Sodety and the Church -males .ttlaga inc.-7We have received the current numbe s of: these 'poplar British Maga- zines ft in -Messrs: Cheweet er Co ,of Toreilto. Tbe fo trier is what its Immo Indicates, a , perfect picture cf high. life in .1:Ingland; full of quaint emu -cite andichatty gessip. about men aud tl ings. It should hive a placeby the fireside of every educated Englishman; The latter i ofcrnirse dernted DO the interests of the Est blished Chareh, and pursues the ehen tenor if its way betWeeir the livelyof belles tetirrs and the tor ere of polemical disquisi- tion.•- ny oftheabove works may . be ob- it:lined from Mr. - Moorhousee of the .Signal office Bookatore. A. subseriber whe'resides in• Minnesota has kindly sea -us a capy of a little work written by hats.; Ifebbic.flea.ireat sufferer in the Indian i Whe of 1863". The story is Well told, and in of the. riosteawfutlythrillirig description.- Mrs. II:is the mother -of the little hero of 11, whe . , carried his baby brother of fifteen -mouths 'old halted or. 'faltered, t ottgh their maks were said when sawing off a poor •fellow's leg to eiadly thinned, as the advanced.: The- sue- cure hini of therheamatism, eessful accoeFlishme it of their task put the 0, He who glees ep is soon -given up, enereeein con on ar d sent them rapidly up and to considereourselves of no use is the al, the road towards Biel mond. - ---.: most -certain way to become useless. - Gets. Grant and 13 tier came .on the ldfie. • fjes The eke out is, Wh isKing, th lest j y i - e during the struggle, a id were enthusiastically pugilist, like aman makinglove to the girls ? received by the troer When the former rode Mon he liues he shouts and cheers Because he's spar King It is whistiered that negotiations are, of the inen were -bey lid example.. - Three - -on foot with regard to the inarriage of Her miles above NeWmarl et the enemy have a very st o41loyal Highness the Princess Helena: ne Work, - b 1 Batley pressed his • advantage end putsnel the retreating. -Con- Kr Britieh seamen ate difficult to be got federates.sd c °sole 0 'it they could not stop at present at Leith; 'and wages are higher -ri g . . to re-forne. Two mil s further on the Con- ' than they have been for e number of Years federates hava at tiline of redoubts past ne. - , - - it perfectrti ilcrnandtl eoicrat.celdis. at c. suchter,e carrying inte inghrevaavlyaThe 'horrible expression Bully bo , with a glass eye, is considered endurable y that it is - "nilpssible e force ,a - column of when rendered Taurine youth with a crystal troops througi them. , Theirwerks cross the optic, . I, 13 Newmarl et rnad; justbeyoud the Lurel Hilt dnectio is. -Gen. Be. ney at 'once determmed Church; and their gar sweep the roa• peace, he was requested by the jailor to ere . ne?s A 'brotlier editor. ' tells us that when he . as in prison libelline. a justice. of the 0 to carry veil pf ads works as . lay in - his the prison ariff. . front by general rhsa It, reconnoitering the . , 0:j.- A young man advertises tor a situatie grourid himself amid storm of shells I' have son -ie -law in a respectable family.- • 'Would never &pea surpaseed. The assault was Macre as the men cheering and t twO-O'cilecli, piiie have no objection) he says, to go a Short dia- 1 .- tance in the country: . - . . -, , • sh rting on a rein ' :rimy *ere Met wide a• in! eerous fire of gre ie . and cannister . and I j inmeesing vol eys of - unsketry eliat worked- te-ribie.. hasip • ill theieeanks still unflinching they lie-ld the4 Way. In crosiing air hair - veiling creel oT peen lited they were exposed. to a.friehtful cufiIadirg fire. Of artillery, • arid the -casualities were tdrrible. Still the hire pressed- forlyerde Oii approaehiag the: roe doubts ehey were. fourd even more.formidable than was at first supp sed, Aeperfect.Obbat- is held them at bay while the 'Confederate _ infantry liteeellymoved them, down, - The flirts Were inrrounde -:-by a broad ditch eight feet dap, into which some • •of the- colored troops -leaped only toiled tiler:twelves penned it -witterio door of le reat. These works he'd no selly. pbrts and • s ere accessible - only - by drawbridges' over '.th -ditches.- These, of course, were drawn; up. The line: was • with, drawn .to the.farthest jsido of thecrest,--sehich roaition was held til night, when "a, demon- tration was made a‘ ainst the weeks inTthe diich �f which our were cooped up. Thu's giving them a opportunity to e :cape hroughan advance p the road. The gain of oue-half to three arters of a mild was_ a.ecompiislied,ebut it osedearly. The corps ost ever 500 men- k !led and wounded. At he same time that t s Wtis going on Keritz's cavalry dashed wildl up to the very gates of Richniondi which.fa he, reported to Butler, who at once. despatcl a a. division ef infantry to his support, This division marched unre- sisted to within musk t sage of the city, and probably might heve marchedinto the Con - fed -el -Me -capital, tho it re clear they colid ot have held it. 0 arriving in the suburlis f the cityrthey foun Kama, had .ivithdrawn 'or a wise purpose. The division was then rdered to return, al hough our advance- was heeeed Laterel 11.-- Our expedition is ly means tetinin: ed. . THE- ADXINIST11.1 Abol- rion newspapers h. vine, pronounced it a ilsehocid -thee ace eted recruits ere to be narked With the let et "I " at Springfield. repeblish the or er, which is all'the reply ecessary to its deni 6 I PROVOST ALARM. GiNERA.L'S OFFICE? " WASHINGTON, 1) : Z, Whiti Enroll ni e n Fell " Does:cm-1h ad to mark- all rejected I would suggest that substitutes bemarke (4-13-11-1e-loc.ur friend. U. S. Vols.- Chief-, Genes. Bureau." . It willtake soniet of an abolition nesvs believe that the abo 'caLuulnuallYS'OLDriehs trs D LIKE TATTLE. ---The two penny tyrants at Washington have been guilty of a ne*inf my. Some time -ago they commenced the sy_stem .of branding re- jet.tecl recruits, and w have actually extended that degra ng praetice to soldiers wheerilte:r.lacce. pted. ere is the °Mal docu- e _ s . i.h-4-hh--4--ese---*----e. „ f;- lire would _direct the attentidn of our rix town a d country readers to the advertisnient t Of Mess s. Fait= li-, 'Co. . ..1 most exeetleet stock of Fall and Winter Goods is now being _ . opened 'et antheie establishment. I t , 13E14 \IAN Ileeta DAys.---We are glad to learn - that the steathshio Peruvian, which I it Quebec oil the 3rd -instant, made the ren home, having reached Liverpool on the morning of the thus: accomplishing the eashige.in nine days. Her Riccellency Lad v (nick and family, besides several die- n titter-ins:led officem of the arib-y, were kassen- gels by her. -Quebec Mercury:- - • • 1 C. -±p 1. Baden- leiter. mentions that Mlle n aetrese of -the Palais Bohai Theatre of Peri., Who had arrised in that chy, deter- ni.ned t try het tear': at the gaming tuble,end was for Mime eneugh to find herself, at the expirm on Of three quarters of an hour, the fi winner if 37,000f. She was so- wise as not11 Women haat many advantages .ove nien, One oftherd is, that his will has n operation till he is 'dead, whereas hers gen orally take& in her lifetime, Oe Agentleman has discovered an exCel first of the month, hired youogqIicks ho ac - comp ny them in a sail -boat, under pretence of mo1 ing a family to the American side by water. Hicks went in good faith, but, no goon as.the Greens got him on the lake, -they presented achim a revolver and threatened to shoot him if be made the least resistance. They then put the boat for Dunkirk, 'and on arriving there dragged Hicks before a re- cruiting officer, ati sold lum for a lerge• amount iii greenbacks. Hicks" was then pieced -in charge of n, military official .,for the eight,' who took -him to a room in the third story of the lioure, and plithim to bed, with a Yawl"; malt te guard him. - Hicks pretended to sleep trom the moment he lay down), until about two hours before daylight when finding his guardian safely in the •embrace of 'Morpheus, he efole out of bed, forced the window open, leaped down on a woodshed h story helm, and rolled 'himself into the street. Here, after sitting on the. pavement for a short time to recover breath from the Shock received hy, the fall, he started to his :feet and rad like it deer towards .the lake; on reaching Which he discovered a sinall boat on the beach .with the ears inside of it. This heat the desperate boy appropriated at once, and without a thought but that of escape, jumped into it and started 'in the direction of Canada„....witheet either- et mpass or rudder, amid desperation and earliness, alone. The night was rough and stormy, and the boy's' strength nearly exhausted, when the morning broke and the heave fellow found himself fat out of eight of the land, in close'proximity to a Canadian schooner, Which was -working her Way up the lake to Toledo. The captain kindly. ook Hicks onboard his vessel, carried .htm to Toledo, treated him in .a most bene- volent manner, and assisted him to mike his war home by .the Canadian railway) and George Hicks arrived safely at thinnvilleeon Saturday lest. Green; the kidnappere has run away. • - FIUS-1X. ON :POPULAR EDUCATION:FIUS IX. has addreesed a, brief to the Arelibishop of Friburg 'respecting the new law on primary schoels in the Duchy of 13adena_ His Trw Palvirrtionutritz. NEW FALL DRYGOODS John Pair 41c. xivz zow RECEPTED a .1:13LL ASS013:TRIVIt DRY-COODS SUITABLE FOB -Wmte,r -Witt* comparsme .UTE HEW TEnros iir POTJTaA4113 LITSTIMS, Tartan' Poplins and Wings., _ TOGETHER iT5 "VERY FULL STOCX OP PLUX-COLORED FRNCE, lam** COBOURGSe BERATHEAS are. - - TO THEM 43ToCZ or TWEEDS AND CLOTHS ' of both Cloudieu and inverted goods, Directirom the Illannineteriez. They would inviie particular attention awl their stock of . READY-MADE CLOTHE:11%f, is the largest they ever had. .-. -00de rich, October 4th,1264. r -press begins by stating that he lia.s heard with O much sorrow that nieasures are prepariqg . which greatly imPeril the • education of the ; young, by withdtawin Vieth ." from the tau. tuy discipline and the vigilance of the Catlin - lie Chue•elt." staies, hehrever, thet lent way to disperse a crowd of idle buss. II Offers to teach thetn the catechism, and the instantly run array.„ _ Ce)e The man that cheated the printer lef town last week company With the woine that floes her husband. They were joined short disrance from town •• by the fellow *h stole a stick of figura-ice from a habv. • heis, at the same -time 4 overwhelmed with -Y jog ", to, find the Archbishop fighting as vigorously as ever for Abe faith. l'he brief t cootievese-Of atruth no one can be ignorant a that the deplorable condition in which society a -finds itself, las its •source in the -baneful 0. shiections employed to withdraw from pablic educational- establishments, and even from the bosoms...of families,the holy religion of Christ, by his doctrine of salvation. But this detestable inode of teaching, separated from the Catholic faith and the power of the Church, is source of evil to private indi- viduals ard society. When the teaching of lettees and sciences and the education which the upper classes of society obtain. at •the public schools- are - alone concerned-hhaho does net ice that the same methodevt11. pro- duce much more baneful results ifit is applied to the popular schools ? The brief concludes, by coogratalating-the Archbishop upon the energetic opposition he has manifested to the reform of theitiopular schools in Baden, and implores God to assist him and his faith- ful Coadjutors their struggles "for the cause of the HolyChurch." ' 'No .man,' says.Mrs. Partington, "'was better calctlated to judge. Of pork Allan -my husband was; he knew, what good hogs Were, he did, fcr lie had been becuglat • up with 'em fronihhis The New York World had a special, correspondent with Sheridan's army in the Shenandoah during the recent battles- the only one then .present. Ile wrete a full ac- count ofthefight -for transmission by tele- graph, but the Aovernment at Washington suppressed it although Gen Sheridan had pre- viously endorsed and apprrived it. This sup- pression was a piece of petty spite to the World. When my blood flows like wine, when all is ease and proseerity; when the sky is blue, and birds, sing and flowers blossom and iny- life is an anthem:moving in ,time and tune then this world's joy ari4 affection suffice.• -e - But -when a chane comes, when Lain weary - and disappointed, when the skies lower into the tombre night, whee there is no song of bids, and the. perfume of ilewers is but their hiying hreath, when . all is sonsetting and autumn. then I yearn -for HMI who sits with summer of love in His soul, and feel that earthly aftectibu is but a glow worm light, compared' tO that which blezes with such • effuleence the heart of God;•; -.Beecher. 0 to tem t the fielde goddess-- aey further,- and the sau day started for Paris; probably wishing again. to resist the temptation t� play Otter from Texas to one of tlie ietIli chi* manilla palters,- is pliblish ed ai Enelis papers. - The writer says Texas . in a fi urishing condition, mad so egroes have been breught into the :country during' the:war, that ',labor' 'is abun- dant an a large cotton crop is growipg. says the proditheof •Tc;x- as the preseut yar wifl be t least 500,090 bales, but he think& the dro of the other. Confederate States -shill not exc ed .4h9,000.: . Bri sb. Anzericart Confederation. The ew Yorkliercad concludes an artidl e n this. biect thus i•--- " Wh Ie here we. have patties favorite is disunion of our own WI ritories, the . gariadlin statesmen are eraleairoting to unite and bon- - solidate their own. The success of the Scheme f is. as yeeby no inears - certain, and for the r ollowink causes e There 'is ne reason- what- ever wley the lower provinces should adopt it. The co mercial relations betweed- Nova - .Scotia;-ew Brupswiek and Neerfoundland 'amides are ver5r slight. - They are imate- with the' Vatted States than upper provinees: : WITthey should heir present institutions, policy. and . cothections- to inland majorities; rely different interests, they vrill not •asily, Made to epaiprehmide New k, if it has any speciality of intereSts , would more naturally look to the ates than the Canedas. - - e 'met place; some of :the wiiest. e upper provinces ask this question: se will thiacOnfederaey be unless It national powers, the. ohject of all ong Weak States uti---alile to exercise. them by hemselves ? • _What will be the ad, treaties, r maintain armies or navies, either ,i) Vantage f ,such a goverbineat • if it , is ,-not perfectly! iedepeodeut.? - It cannot . make frits o ndeferice- or to secure the respect of foreign. oWers. Canada has had a long suc- cession o Governors, Jew of them being men of ebilit or being ,anything • more tbaa far °rites sent front the mother country by their relatives lid friends, when hi power, to re- cruit . the r broken fortunes,and utterly enable to be of ny real advantage to the. provinee,. where th y are continually met by factions and oppositions -with local polities. - .Thenew _confeder cy, even if it might elect better Men to gover it than are now sent to Canada, would no gain e single political or comnier- cid edva tag.e by the change. Npthing short -Isla total and ,complete separation from the mother c untry riud the assunerition: of node- . , peUdellee 111 all respects would be any remu- neratiou for the expense and trouble Of creating he- proposed change. If the British - America s are prepared to adopt this view, .then the. ew project will have a purpose and be worth the trial. If not, it is a mere shad. and will ot pay,- _. - . • . .. "Thes . are the- views which are entertained by'st nani rous class in the --Provinces at this moment, pd these very niens_seine of Whom we know, propose as a cure for the. troubles of Caned a very diff• erent plane-naineiy, that of makh g. Montreal a freepoite by -which measure hey feel confident they •cauld take. away th trade_ �f New York, control the commerc of one. Western States and estab- lish the Canadas on .a.;. tenting which would make them forget all tthepOt.ty freebies over which they- are now centendinge ' The effeet eu:o.: .New Y. ork of .su.c..h. ..a policy as this we may cons:der at a more convenient nnom- andenieak pencil ,faithfully re-procitth ing the exquisite landscapes of our nobl distriet, with which no familiarity ca ever abstract.from their beauty: " Mr. Cresswen paintings were veryr • numerous, and were varied in their style He con4eted in all the art departmen except that•of portrait,,.and in all he w eminently successful --having talsen in ' several classes both the first and _scowl prizes, of which. .there were awarded t him no less than twelve. ,In oils and i water colors his pre-eminence was alik conspicuous. ; and although; Seine. of his *paintings claimed our especral' favor, yeti all were characterised by his usually accurate dpwing, and a more elaborate finish than he generally bestoWs, We are ead to state th*t some of the best were secured bigehOemen connected with this town before theirtransmission to Hanailton for exhibition, 4o that we have the satis- faction of knowing that they have found i permanent. abode imong those who respect Mr. Cremwell's friendship as much as they admire Ills ialcnts. Among the .Canadianlimdficapea In oil,. may be me timed- with especial commendation .th MOM llettr. the lir*alls at Dunaas, exhibitin in the back -ground the fine highland ridg that there stretchis ea. ress the country agara. The scene is one of.cle.eP soli- . tude, the shadea of oveningfalling gradual - 1. and the inore..in with the give up . inaritim With mai be yeti.' Brutistri to protec United S "hill men in -t of what possesses union a - Food and Drinic as PIedicmes. We desire to. give the -widest publicity to the rapidly enlarging faith- of the medical faculty in victuals and drink as medicines. -- C.) Aeg. 19, 156,1. . i Thousands whin thousands of eick people ( have been sent to the grave for want of neer - ore, Surgeen Board of ' ishment upon the mistaken theory that the Id, .111iuois. sick can bear privations which would kill- the ition to •my suggestion sound. In, - nine. hundred and ninety -eine ecruifs and substitutes, cases out of a thousand, they are actually less Il•accepted recruits and able to bear such privatiens. The lamp rat' thus : "1" in small -life will not bunt without eil .1.- the majority or me.dicines are -not food, and .to peer the :II. BAXTER, Surg. alone into the sick frame. is lihe trinunine ed e Oft Prose Mar. the lamp with Water. So well, is it understood ' that the appearance of exedssive., energy, as Mg besides the denial ia inflaniatory fever, is an outburst of week, aper to make the polilic riess, not of strength, that Where' the doctors e is a " copperhead " of old bled and -starved, brandy and cream are now poured in, All eure is but the te- parative power of nature, and it is upor. food, not upon dregs, that nature is sustained. We know the infinite value of drugs when rightly. used, but they _Who value thenibeet, value theta for their own powers, not for imaginary Ones ; In every disease, whatever its charac- ter, the first care mat be to discover by what form of diet, and in what ,proportions„ &e natural support of life can be most coin- pletely and harmlessly applied. It means death by prolenged sickness to. let any patient subsist for a week upon no better commissariat •t1han a bueeli of grapes; a shlieter, a- box of three mixtures, andn, .draught night and morning: -Let every •one'who has care cif the sickteke this filet to heart. It may he a tedious and difficult task to discover how' to feed, and in some cases the mere act of feeding may be a slew and very painful pro; Oess ; but the stimulant of food is the one Medicine that cannbt he dispensed with. . If " , PROVOST MARSHAL GENERAL'S OFFICE, t • Washing -to , D. C„ .Aug 19. Dr. Z. -IL ' Whitm re, Suri;kson:. Board- of Enrollment, Spring -J.4 Id, DoOhon-In iddit n to my •suggestion, to Mark -ail rejected re uits and substituteser would _suggest that al the' accepted reeruits and substitutes be in- rItechthus" I," in small of b- I'haiek. swi.11, I think, reyent to a great extent the practice of bount -jumping. : . ' Your friend. J. . . BAXTER, Sarg. US Vels. Chief Med. a ff. -Prose Alar. 'Gentls Bureau. • Isnot this enough to stir a fever the we could exchange; the entire use of drugs, blohd of ege ? To revent bounty -jumping, and all the harm done he them, for universal recognition of this very simple truth, we e sus. the brave men who a to fight crer battles pect that the bills of mortality: would show a and save our country are to be marked with very considerable balance in ourfavere„ a brand, which they ill carry to their graves. • • --N. Y. World; The Effect of Id.arriage. • • A QUEER PLAp*E. wall -fit the city of.1' fortress protected ,b pa.rt_as were ne_ver y At the bottorn of th overarched by an - satisfied our aneestin suspension bridge Menai Bridge, but s solid in construction, Wires, that it -is impo heavy -laden omnibus consequences of falli and heingthankful Engineers may be but unlearned passen one.of these days. it shall be on fleet) a carriages either. T great saving of time, shorten your days. two minutes, and at hollow which took mount again by p bridge. -Front . - On the edge of one yburg hangs a -natural such a ditch and rain- niad-e by human hands. chasm, the- Sarine is Id string bridge,. which ; but 1831 opened a f Wider span than our much •lighter and less hung with such cobweb ible to traverse it in a ithout thinking of the g 170 feet plump down, touching terra firma. ured of its stability; els dreadite_goring way f ever I cross it again, when not laden with e bridge, however, is -a even_if it threaten to You can now cross in a level, the profound n hour to descend and sing over be ancieat neon- :Society." QUEEN'S DIVIkION. division took place oti Hon. John Simplon, proposed by Mr. -T. of Ontario) and seco Davison, of Maripoi nomination, Mr. Sim elected. He spoke in the strain of hiap ly advocating the co tha back country= 03.- Father Ching ford, C, W. The election for this Monday, at Lindsay. the old member, was all Thompson, Warden ded by Colonel Samuel There being no other son was declared duly r half an hour, chiefy blished address, strong- struction of roads into lobe. • ' y is at present in Strat- Doubtless you have remarked with satis faction, how the little 'oddities of men who Marry rather late in life, are pruned away after their marriage. - You have found a manwho esed to be shabbily and carelessly dressed, with a huge shirt -collar frayed at the edges, aud glaiing red silk pocket. hand- kerchief, broken off these _things, and be- come a pattern of neatness. You have seen i'm,an whose hair and whiskers were ridi- culously cut, speedily - become like other Erman beings. 'You have seen a clergyman who wore -a long . beard, in a little while appear without one, • You have Seen a man who used to sing ridiculous sentimental songs leave them off!. A wife is the grand wielder of the moral pruning knife. Whenever you find a Man you know -little about, oddly dressed, or talking ridiculously, cr exhibiting any eccentricity of_manner, you may be tol- erably sure that he is not a- married man. For the little corners' are rounded og the little shoots are pruned -..away, . in married men. Wives generally have much more -Sense than their husbands,. especially when the husbands are clever men.. ° The wife's advices are like the ballast that keeps the ship steady.. TheYare like the wholesome, though pamful shears, nipping off little growths of self -copeck and, folly. . - Dastardly Kidnapping ands itemsair- , . able Escape. The Dunnville Independent fell a story of the kidnapping oftt lad of 18 years of age, named George Hicks, from that place by two men, John and Larry Green, and of the sub- sequent (almost .miraculous) escape of the boy. The two Greens, it iseems, abtsat the . . FOUND DROW]NED:OII the morning !of the . Gth .of September, the light-honse keeper's son, of Pelee Island, Jerome Shetmen, -while walking along the beach, ten miles east of the lighthouse, discovered._ the body of a deed man washed ashore in a recent gale. By his scrip in one of his po.ekies ; his haii- alt gone time ago.- , - . - - - •Trom the decomposed state of the body. It. Beane/ near Rond Eat; Lake Erie, a short add young matrtpder thirty years of age, dees he is supposed to have been ha, • sailor, five feet six or eight inches in height; had on belt, a few cents and some small American perished af t the burning of the propeller . - was sapposedi that the body found *as likely to be one of a bine worsted shirt, black -trouser* black :these unfortunate men who ....._e___.. 1 I g *ow " AND i i Tnii."--The DetrOit Pies Prep remarks :-" The sadden transition of OUr people .from the cheapest government en earth to the dearegf, and from almost no tax, MOH: to the !nest oppressive forms of taxa- tion-, js a change the effects -of which mast be most serious. :,... Whether prepared or not for , this change, it is one they are no* compelled to meet, and it .is practically a ethatize from the best to thehanst of governments. Here- tofore our government rested so -lightly upon our people, that they eheie hardly -conscious of being governed. The American no longer stands under his own rine and fig -tree a free indp;• his- earnings, his• home, :and even his life now *Icing to Abraham Libcoln, or rath- Meek abolitionists term hilt,- "the govern- inent." * THE MADMEN SWISS. -The .modern Swiss are sometimes taunted with being interested in their actions and -fond of motley. The taunt is flippant; for man; even aftee he has achieved political independence,- -cannot live on moutitain air alone. _The bowl of milk porridge that feeds ohe mouth, will not fill ti the crarin a of two, The owner- of the second moth must offer for sale What he has to sell; in thefirstinstance) his services and his strength; secondly, his handiworks and boarcland lodging in his attractive home. Are the English indifferent to money? And the Irish? And the Scotch? Are not the -French, -athrist as hey are for military glory, thirstier Still after .francs and centimes? What do French country people talk about? Louis XIV. or Napoleon L? Austerlitz or Solferino ? Never; their talkis ofpistoles and ecus, of the price of kme and the pros- pects of beetroot. Their greatest delight and pride. is the possession of plenty. of five -franc pi ces.- Prem. "London goad " - Non attbertisentents. , NEWMARBLE WORKS Main Street, Rieeter. D. iSc A. AVOONNEf314. MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES, Posts, &c., of every description and style -of -workmanship, furnished on shortnotice, midst tbe lowest primes. Liberal rediletion made tor Minh. sh ALL ORDERS PUNCTUALLY ATTENDED TO Designsof Monuments drc-mar be seen rit the -shop. - Exeter, October. lste1864. w12 -eye FARM to RANT, • --OR-- , -- LET ON SHARES! T'ingDgasidiNEDwilliet his farm in Col- - borne, lots 10 and 11, 9th eon., either on shares or otherwise, as maybe agreed upon, The . farm compnscs -- TWO Hil/TDRED ACRE& • juo of which are cleared, and -80 free of stamps Welt watered -within' . prirk. MILES OF .GODERICH, and only time miles from two Saw -Mills. Barns, dwelling-houserieteein good order. For further .particulars apply to 110.1dtatT: GIBBONS, Esti', Goderich, or onehepremises to . • I)AYLD CLARK. pederi4 04011864. ' *36-11 - • • Arceis of Stationery AND _ OOL . , In quantities to suit Country Merchantep . ' AT THE ' LOWEST. .11101.1S0 RATES; .' . At the fffignix Offices All the new Novels,. 31.4t1G-AZI11711ES, AND NEWSPAPERS Received es SO013 as`pubhshecl, atThe SIONALi' .0FRICE _ - Book and Stationery Store. Godericb,.Ingnst 17th, 1864. w20 • SHERIFF'S SALE OF United Counties of Dirt virtue oi a init of t Huron and Bruce, AI Fieri Fades hatted out • To wit: of Her Majesty's County Court of the United Countres of Huron& Billet, and to Inc directed against the lands and tene- ments oTWIlliant Hex -thorn. at the nun of John Downey Bryce, James Playfair,John Meleturrieh, Samuel-Ounn and John S. flayfairyl have seized and taken in Execution all the right, title and interest ofthe said elefendannin and to lotzumber Seven. East side of William street. in The village of Walkerton in the County of Bruce; which Lands and tenements I shall offer for 4bale , at my office in tbe Court Rouse in the Town of Linde- - rich. on Tnesclify the Tentut day of January. at . the hour el Twelve sof the dock, noon. ... JORN lictiONAL.1), - • -- , Sheriff it &BS By S. Pomace, Deputy Sheriff. - Sheriff's Office, Codench, 1 " October bit. 1864. . .5 _ *36 . - SHERIFI''S SALE OP LALTIL11. • Uniteet Counties of liDY virtue of two -Writs -of Huron -and Ilruce, JL) Fieri Fayias imutd out ' To Wit 3 of Hti Majce3r/s County Court of the County of OntarioandConrt ofetrUk• mon .Pleas, , and to me - dfrected iigainst the Landsand tenementtofStephen D.Crawford,F.H. Lynch Staunton, Enoch C. Dowling and Nobert Gilmour, at the suits of Isaac IV. Howard sari the Corporation of the Towaship of Eielarstie, I have seized and takin HI EXeoUtIOJI all the right, „ tale and interest ofthe said defendants,in an/ to Fork Lot No 15, Lot No, 8, and the South half of Lot No. 6, East side of Queen street North, being subdielsionsotrark Lot No. 4 la the TB - !age of Pewter; South hall of Lot 22 ON the Sale -si*de of Queen Street South Paisley, Park Let Ito. 15 North side 'of Cambridge street, and Blook 35 West side ofQueen Street,torth.Paisley, hot IS South side and 13 and 14 North side of Cambndge street, Peisterrblerth halt of let ,L East side of Huron street, Southampten,56-feet of the Nortii part of Lot Igo. 4, North aids of Jag* 35treet, Southampton, Lots 29 and JO ou the North side ofClarendon street, Southampton ; Lot 18 East side of Norfolk Street, Southampton, Lots 21 And 22 South side of Louisa strer!t ' Southampton, all in the County of Bruce; %chilli hinds and tette- -mental shallow* tor sale at my office in the Court House, in the ToWn of Gederich, oa Tugs- fdaythe Tenth flay olJan nary next, until hour of Twelve of the clock, noon. JOHN MACDONALD Bk«ifIL4A By S. POLLOCK, ty Sheriff. -Sherifi's Office;GodeHCb, I - let October, 1864. 1-- *36 MORTGAGE SALE L • OF VALUABLE PROPERITip TINDBR AND BY Vilrl'IJE-Or. A row, ofSale contained ht *Mortgage, *sae - by Richard Darlington ei the Tomo**, borne, in the County of Huron, Yeoman, °film first part; AMP Aulington, las iv*, Ow. the purpose of barring_ her dower) ofthe sewed pant default having been made in the due payment thereof, will be sold at the AUCTION KA= of Messrs, 11110MSON4 Roman - Kingston lime, Goderialta Monday, the 24th. of October, illtStallt) at 12 o'clock, noon, the following Prop- erty,vIzt I40t number Four in the Seventh coot., Eastern Division ot the Township.of Colborne in the County cf Buten contends% One hundred acre* 011444,n:tore oc.shito-13cedlicsifirPOWOr ° sale. -M.V. CAMERON, Godericle* October 1st, A. IA 1/16Sok14". 364Vr" _2 -1 Pei Mr. pram -*the echo 7 -tyro Bee 13*n ter A w won sad -_ the .1"It start trice i3012h his Mai Pe0i N*11 =TO mai t Oka keg the . sash say ) lb that all the sieh he frOu - Gln a rni t Ar •