the last rebellion.PM.*:? EXCLUSION.Last week we left the cxcurtionists atthe point of departure from hospitable Oswego, on board the Steamer Norseman for Kingston. Leaving Oswego about midnight we touched • Kingston wharf after a pleasant passe geT of sixhours, and betook ourselves to our re-#spcctivc hotels. At breakfast, Alderman Brennan, stout and jolly as an alderman should be, announced that weIwere expected to assemble at 9, a.m. at Victoria Hall, where the Mayor and Corporation would present an address and receive a reply, after which car-sent for ten years, is breaking stone in becoming the quarry, is also W. Chisholm, the notorious robber.national lt;of railwaT •ngniThe fcrnnie department is n model of n,e fromneatness and ‘quietness ; not n sou d is heard. One can but faintly conceive the agony in making so many females sit year after year without using that unruly member, tlx* tongue I They 1 et| tjie oc were either knitting or sewing, andract. of almostcould hatness andthere sat, among the young women, old Grace Marks, who, with McDcr-mot, assisted to murder her master atSheand deli I;lie buildistead ofWhile stThornhill, twenty-fi ve years ago. entered the prison for life, a quarter of [i;!]i ” xv a century ago, and now is a stern old woman, knitting away She has a stolid look of despair out of her wicked lookfry (whoarchitect!n g grey eyes.The former rigid system of treating piisorjcrs is greatly ameliorated ; they are now t’lowed five da\s off theirto read oscript ionsBench,” The iu 3gthe 1 a w v