ieee mtewercna ~ oF sgiieael oa sp cy Att Re Generel Meade was present on the field all day. but was not wounded. as was et first reporte 1. Some of his staff had narrow es- capes. Major Pease’s hurse was shot under him. The let brivade of the 2d Division of the Fifth Corps is spoken of as havin: particu- Jarly distinguished itself during the fight. Brevet Maj.-Gen. Winthrop was its com- mander. and had two horses shot under him Brg General Irwin Gregy, commanding a brigade of cavalry, was wounded in the ankle. Gen. Davis was also wounded severely in the shoulder. Major Lumaine of Gregg s stall was badly wounded in the foot. head of Gen. Warren's staff was wounded in the band. Brevet Brg-Gen. Morrow, commanding 3d Brigade, 3d Division, Fifth Corps, was wounded ia the shoulder. Capt Col. Bank-| the 4 7 i Liberal and Censervative, had taken a greater | would support the measure. But such a Union is impossible ; Lower Canada will not consent to a Legislative Union, We all knew when Wolte conquered Canada the {French Canadians were guaranteed their religion, their language, and their laws and customs, and they do not wish their valuable | privil wes to be endangered by being united ina Legislative Union with the Anglo-Britons, The French Canadians are thoroughly mon- archicl in their principles of Government, and they have a great horror of Republican Jnstitations. Wemust lay nside all thoughts ola Legislative ( nion, ¥ we remain out of vnfederacy, What will be our destiny ? What will be tbz ros pects of the future prosperity of a small Island, with only 80,000 jinhabitan’s, with an independent Govern- jment vd a hostile tariff, when put in com- Cowdray, Ass’t Adjt.-Gea. un Gen. Baxter's; pet'ion with four millions of their fellow staf, was mortally wounded. Ovl. Tilden of|ountrymen, united under one Government the 20ch Maine Vols., wounded in the leg. About 150 prisoners were taken, wrong whom was Col. Allen of the 24th N. C. Re- and without s Custom-house, from the Atlan- tic to the Pacific, lam happy to say that the first article in the Quebec Report, relative giment, forwerly an officer in the UJ. S. Re-| toa Confederate Union of all the British gulars. | North Amer’can Colonies, wag carried unani- The correspondent capture j yesterday was! mously, with cheers, and not one solitary Mr. Tremblay of the N. Y. Herald. party of cavalry whicb captured him subse The | yoice was raised in the Conference Chamber -|in oppositioa to the principle. But now a queatly came in contact with our men in aj change has come o'er the spirit of the dreams slight skirmish, devog which the correspon deat made his escape. Col. Herring of the 18th Pa. Vols. wa wounded it, the ankle. TOWN MEETING ON THE QUESTION OF CONFEDERATION Fepavary 10, 1965, { Hon. Mr. Meath Haciland’s Speech continued -jof certain Island Delegates, who say there j was no unsmimity in the Conference for the s| first three or four days, until it was decided i that the Lieutenant Governors of the various | Provinees were to be appointed by the Federal Government. I have no selfish object to gratify in advocating the cause of Conted- eration. We are told sume Delegates have | been offered Governorships, Legislative Coun- cillorships, Secretaryships, &c. As Tam not fa member of the Government, I should stand }2 very slight chance of being appointed a | Lieutenant Governor, I could not qualify The difSeuities with which the Canadians | for a Legislative Councillor, therefore my bave had to contend among themselves are | only hope of promotion would be by appeal- nething whatever to us, the proposed Confederation be sound, ] care | wet what may have induced the Statesmen of Canada to endeayour to accomplish it. I will, however, endeayour bricily t) shew what these diffieulijes are, or rather have been. They originated ia the Unjon between Upper and Lower Canada. They arose from a want of foresight on the part of British statesmen. By a leading provision of the Union Act, the two Provinces were entitled to equal representation jn the Legislature ; the namber of representatives for eac! being 65. Now this fixed equality of representa- tion in Parliament was a very great error. All the best lands are in Upper Canada; and, consequemtiy, the inerease in population in that Province has far exceeded that of the Lower Province. And not only does Upper Capada exceed Lower Canada in population and the quality of her lands, but she zreatly exceeds her a)sv in the extent of her territory and in wealth. The excess of the population of the Upper Province over that of the Lower i6 some 35 000. and of the entire revenue she paid three-fourths; and yet, owing to the Lower Province haying the same number wt represeatatiyes in the Legislature as the Upper Province, when in any sersivn of Parliament, the apprepriations for ]ocal in- provements and other purposes in each came If the principles of | ing to the people of this Colony to elect me asone of the fivemembers to the Federal | louse of Commons. | This question is the most important, the | most absorbing that has ever been mooted _by Colonists since the days of the American | Revolution. As many speakers are waiting j to express their opinions upon this great jsubject, I will proceed at once to make a | few hurried observations upon some of the | leading features ot the Quebec Report, which |Report J am tappy to say meets with the ‘approval and cammendation of Mr. Card- ( well, our Colonial Minister, with the excep- | tion of the paragraphs restricting the number | of Legislative Councillors, and granting the | prerogative of pardon to the Lieutenant Governors. A great out-cry has lk eu raised ,in seme of eur local newspapers against those Delegates who signed the Report on a Sunday. 4 plead guilty to the charge of having affixed my name to it on a Sunday, as | had ne ether opportunity of signing it, jand am mow prepared to receive the first ) stone that may be thrown by any individual | who has never committed a greater breach of | propriety 8 the Sabbath. | The Legistatice Council is to be construct- ved by havimg 76life members, divided in the following proportions : 24 members for Upper Canada, 24 members for Lower Canada, and to be made, the Lewer lrovinee obtmined as } 28 members ‘for the Maritime Col mies, to be large a share of “ the spoils” as the Upper subdivided so that Nova Scotia and New Province. Proviace wes thus subjected hed—in propor- tion fe hor greater material progress in all respects over that ef the Lewer Province— become greater and mre irritating from The injustice to which the L pper Brunswick shal. each have 10 members, and Newfoundland and this Island each 4 mem- | bers. 1 know there are many present here to night who vbjeet to this principle of | division, and who contend that each Colony, year to year; and at length she came to the | whether large or small, should have an equal determination that she would no Jonver sub- / umber ot Legilative Councillors, according mit to it. She resolved that either r-presen- |te the Constitation of the United States of tation in the Legislature should be based on population, or that, should she net be abile to uccomplish that reform, she would seck, with al! her energies, ‘to obtain a repeal of the Union Act. With this view they sent the Jien. George Brown to Parhament, and his | first endeavours were to be directed to the effecting of such a change in the representa- tion as would place it on the basis of popula- tion. J representation, the accomplishment of this objeat was a difficulty which mo means could be found te overcome: awé then it a) peared to the leading men that the only mode by which they could hope to extricate the country from the mest inauspicious josition in which it was placed, was cither to repeal the Uniun Act ef 1840, or to form one Grand Federation of the whole ot British America. They bad pledged themselves to seporation. The Conference of the Delegates of the Mari- tume Previnees being hc ld here seeme:| likely te afford them a most desirable opportunity fer putting into operation such machinery us might be needful for the effecting of so eat an object; and they came down to sharlottetown accordingly.” They came here with truly patrioticintentions. Their abject was te form ene Grand Federation under the Pleg of @ld England: a Federation with the eame laws, with the same commercii! regu- tatious, and with one Tariff and one Custom- house, instead of six or seven, as if these British Provinces,.instead of being, as they are, only so many members of one great national family, with common interests, were so many different nationalities, al) jealous ape of another, aad each seeking to benefit iteelf at the expense of the others. It was unjust te say they came down to Charlotte- town, influenced solely by selfish motives. Nu, they were not actuated by merely selfish motives. I give them credit for more patriot- ism, @ \patriotions which includes the whole of British America, and which urges them te seek a Union fur the common well-being and protection of the several peoples, and for the furtherance of the best interests of each and all of these Provinces. I know that it is said at the East Point, and, indeed, an every other quarter of the Island, that the Report of the Conference is the work of the Canadian Government. But this I can fully disprove. At the very commencement of the discussion of the great question by the Con- vention of Delegates, we agreed that Upper anada should have one vote, Lower Canada one vote, Nova Scotia one vote, New Bruns- wick one vote, P. E. Island, and Newfound- land cne vote. The number of our Di legates was seven, Uur one vote, therefore, must have, on all oceasions, been that of a majority consisting of four or more of our number: You will also see that, voting accor ling to this arrangemertit, it was impossible for Canada to carry any Resolution, how much soever she might be bent upon it, without the concurrence of at least two of the Mari- time Provinces. Therefore, however unjust our anti-unionists may think any of the terms of the Report agreed to by the Con- vention, they act most unfairly in pouring their vials of wrath upon the heads of the Canadian Delegates, as if they by their own votes, wig paw by those of the Maritime Delegates, had carried the resolutions fixing the obnoxious terms. The Maritine Pro- winees had the majority, and nothing was agreed iv without their consent. It is also eaid by our anti-unionists that the Cmadian statesmen, who were Delegates to the Con- vention, were tow wily, too astute for our Delegates; that they possessed too much save for them ; that on any point, when they wished it, they were able to deccive and beguile them: and thas, in fact, as respects our finaaeial interests and representation in the Federal Parliament, they have coinpletely outwitted and entrapped them. To this estimate of the political talents, foresight and general abilities of the stateamen of Canada, as so greatly superior tw that ef the fumanost publie men of the Maritime Pro- vinces, 1 think many amongst us anti- U niopiens, a8 well as Unionists, must strongly Gemur. What! will it be admitiod that Til hy ae Financier, Tepper, Archibald, MeCully, New Brunswick Gray, Fisher, and I say, excepting myself, the Prince Edward Jaland ‘Delegates, bed not sufficient talent and i ity tochold their own when brought face to face with the steteanen of Canada? Will George Coles, the champion of Respon- stide Government and the bowated originator of Free Education‘in:this Island. and Fdward Palmer, the old and tried leadey of Conser- gedism, under whew ' — sensed for so seeny years as a political Lieutenant cop fess that Gait, taal ag MeDonaid gnd Cartier ' axbidised an undue and mesmeric “nfluence over them, whilst in Canada, which made them speek in favor of dvufederstiun at Ottewa aad Toronto, whilst in t).¢ir con- scienses they intended to it in every and form #0 sow as urns 1 4 there are apponents Qnebee Report who say, @ Legielative Union was adyocate:|, they Qwing to the existing equality of 5 i! | . : ey retiuned to | America; but bear in mind that it is much exsier to pull down a political edifice than to build or constrict one. I was an advocate for equality of representation in the Upper Chamber, so that this Island should 8 the same weight and influence as Rhode Island, in the neighbouring Republic; but I was over-ruled in the Conference, not by Canada alone, but by the whole of the Maritime Colones. Even asit is, Newfound- land was very displeased at not being allowed * greater number of members in the Legis- lative Council than we are entitled to, upon the ground of her population exceeding ours by 50,000. We shall find it very difficult to oppose going into the Union, if all our sister Colonies consent to do so, particularly as the Imperial Government has approved of the Report, with only two exceptions, namely, the fixed number of members in the Upper Chamber, and the power of pardon being vested in the Lieutenant Governors. "I think the Imperial Government was right in ob- jecting to the fixed number in the Legislative Council, for if a conflict took place between | the two branches of the Legis!ature there would be no remedy for the evil but a revo- | lution ; and as to the question of the pre- rogative of pardon, I imagine every Delegate will at once give way and consent to carry /out the suggestion of Mr. Cardwell. In the | Conference, | was an advocate for an Elective | Legislative Council, but the rest of the Con- ference, with the exception ot Messiers Coles , and McDonald, were opposed to the principle. | Anti-Unionists oppose the terms of the Que- | bee Report, because, they say, no public | works can be constructed in this Colony out | of the revenues of the General Government; jand that all our taxes will be drained from /us to Canada in hard specie. I should like any Anti-Unionist to point out the clause in | the Report which prohibits or prevents pub- lie works being built in this Is!and by the General Government, provided they are fur | generaladvantage. Why should nota Canal | be cut from Savage Harbor to the Hillsborough | River; it would be a great advantage to the ishipping in the Gulf to avail themselves |of it, instead of being obliged to sail round | either Cape North or the East Point to come | to Charlottetown and ether ports on the South side of the Gulf? Gentiemen may laugh at ithe idea of this Canal being constracted. | But members of our House of Assembly laughed several years ago when Mr. Beer | introduced a Bill to encourage Stéam Navi- | gation on the Hillsborough River; and in the | present day it is looked upon, as a matter of course, to have a Steamer running on Market |days to Mount Stewart Bridge. George |Stephenson was laughed at when he first jattempted his Railway from Liverpool to Manchester; and now we have 2.500 miles of Railway in British America alone. Steam /navigation between England and America, | was proved by the scientific Dr. Lardner to | be an impossibility, and yet England sénds _ her mails by steam across the Atlantic, every | week, by a line. of Steamers, whose arrival can be caleulated to the day, if not to the jhour. We ail recollect when Mr, Tremain’s | first Team-boat, across our Ferry, was thought a great step in advan‘e; now we havea {Steam Ferry beat plying every half hour. The growth of Colonies is different from that of old Conntrice ; the Colonies progress as | fast as giante, and old Countries as slow as dwarfs ; a Colony is a child to-day and a |man to-morrow. The Report provides for |general Bankruptey and Insolvency Laws. liow many mercantile men have been para- \lyzed and ruined in our midet for the want |of a proper system of such laws? ({iion. George Beer,—we can havea Bank- ruptey Law of our own.] That is impossible, we cannot pass a law to bind Nova Scotia, neither can New Bruns- | wick enact a statute to bind us. 1 wanta | Gankruptey Law, passed by the Federal legislature, binding throughout the length jand breadth of British Nerth America, so that every honest but unfortunate trader may ik: enabled to obtain relief, and to com- |mence the world afresh, without having a ee syme unavoidable casuadty in his business or twade. Again, as a lawyer, I should like to | See Gur Statute Law similar in all the Celo- nies: at present they are conflicting; in one Colony you may arrest fer debt, iu anether you cannet; in one Colony you may arvest the hody-@f the debtor in exeeution, and in another you can only levy on his peopercy. Instead of diversity, i. should like uniformity. | By the Report, the Federal and Local Legis latures are to have a concurrent jurisdiction in all matters relating to Agriculture and sr say X therefore, if the Pederad Go- vernment does not properly encourage im- ‘migration into this! Island. we have the power in our hands, it we think we are nut Anereasing a8 fast as our Sister Colonies, aad that ow Jands are remaining too long an- settled and uncultivated, and can vote money — | British Colonies together, both politically and millstone of debts, which ne cannat pay,hang- | tween them, and thereby become the voting ing about his neck fur life, in consequence of | power in the Legislature and the Govern- oa which would have to interest in the matter of immigration, we | case, in the homes of the Island, in paving | should, in all probability, have been entitled | to that great bone of contention the sixth our militia — fathers, sons, brothers and lovers—drafted away to shed their blood und be endured, in euch | truly patriotic part. They will cheerfully go up to Canada; and be found amengst the foremost in the battle, nobly and bravely contending for the preservation of the rights, | : " ‘ ‘ ae, . i he 2e i | member in the House of Commons at Ottawa, | lay down their lives in defence of the Cana-| the privileges, and the freedom of the united | This question of representation in the House | das. All the noble sentiments of the lovers: peoples of British America. With their of Commons has been pretty well ventilated | of freedom-—all attachment to the principles: ithe “ with oe ae, they “pe do oucogm: ‘through the papers and at public meetings; | of our glorious Constitution, and desire for }ful oe cl ge oppression and two of our Island Delegates, at yarious | its preservation—all ties of common interesta| and, thoug ogee! nobly fall, yet — ' mectings, have pronounced against entering | and common ancestry —uall these entirely out| of them, | reer wil _ to gene ~—— - ‘the Confederation with so smaji a representa- | of the question, however, and whoily disre-| from the bloody stri e, to re argh their tion as five members, Upper Canada, Nova | garded, do these men, I ask, altogether for-| Island homes rejoicing, and around their own Scotia and New Brunswick are in favor of the principle of representation by population; | and, in fact, it is useless to expect or imagine | that Upper Canada will surrender the prin- ‘eiple for which she bas been struggling and | contending so many long years. ‘The appeal ‘against the principle of representation by nopulation can oy be made to the Imperial i and I think that body wiil be more likely to confirm the views of the great majority of the Conference than to reverse their decision upon the subject. I believe all the Delegates at the Quebee Conference were fully aware. before they went to Canada, that the House of Commons for the Federal Legislature was to be constructed upon the rinciple of representation by population, Ve went there with our eyes open. We knew the want of that principle was the chief cause of the difficulties between the two Canadas. The same principle is carried out in the construction of the Hquse of Re- presentatives under the American Constitu- tion. But the anti-Unioniats who are so very anxious for the American principle in the formation of the Upper Branch of the Legislature, by a singular inconsistency, are opposed to applying the American principle | of representation by population to the House of Commons, | contend that the Quebec Report gives us more members, in proportion to our population, than England allowed to Scotland at the Union in 1707, or than Eng- land yielded to Ireland at the Union in 1801. In 1707 the population of England was 6,000,000, with 513 members in her House of Commons, Scotland’s population was 1,000,000, and she was only allowed 45 members on entering the Union, whereas she was entitled to 90 members if the wrinciple of representation 7 population fad been granted to her. n 1801, the population of Great Britain was 8,000,- 000, and the number of Members 553. The population of Ireland at the same time was 5,000,000, yet Ireland was only | permitted 100 Members in the United House | of Commons, 80 that the liberal principles of | representation by population was entirely ignored. Next comes the question of the ap- pointment of Governors by the Confederate Government for the seyeral Colonies. 1 must confess I was in favor of this part of the Re- port at the Conference, and am still of the same opinion. Surely as eligible men for Governors can be found in the Colonies, as in Great Britain. We have men as able, as honest, and more experienced in Colonial matters, and in the every day working of Colonial Governments, than the average of Governors sent from Downing Street to rule over us. I have heard it rumored that the Quebee Conference was nearly coming to a dead lock until the third day of its sitting, when the question of Colonial Governors was settled to the satisfaction of the ambitious members of the Conference. and that, sub- sequently, all was peace and harmony, and everything went assmooth as a marriage bell. i never heard the subject of the appointment mooted at the Conference until the 20th of October, after we had been in Session ten days, and then the question was introduced and carried the same sitting without a dis- sentinent voice. Some of the opponcnts of Confederation object to the expense of the Local Legislatures. But the expenses under Confederation, need not be half as great as heretofore; we could dispense with a local Legislative Council, and the House of Assembly safely invested with | the powers of local legislation for education, roads, bridges, Acts of Incorporation of com- | panies and other matters within this juris- | diction, as their statutes would be reviewed _by the General Government. I am aware (that Anti-Unionists are very indignant at | | the idea of the Acts of our Local Legislature being submitted to the Federal Government for approval; but surely they forget that our Acts are all sent across the Atlantic to Down- ing Street; and whether they shall go into | operation or not, often depends apon the word or the opinionof a Clerk in the Colonial Office. It is said by Anti-Umionists that the Inter- colunial Bailway, if built by the Confedera- | tion, will be the erection of a high way by which Canada will send her oats to Halifax, and thereby injure the Agricultura] interests of this Island. ‘There would be some reason in these parties opposing the Union if our staying out would prevent theRailroads being built. But ifthe other Colonies enter the Confederation, the Railroad will be construct- ed in spite of all the opposition we can bring to bear against it. 1 do not believe it will pete injurious to the interests of our farmers, out quite the reverse. If the United States persists in repealing the Reciprocity Treaty, we must find other markets for our agricul- tural produce; we must ship le rge quantities vf oats to England in our new vessels, and what we cannot find shipping for here, will find a market at Halifax, which will soon be- come the Empire City of British America, and all our grain will concentrate there for exportation to Europe. Some are jealous of the probab!e destiny of Halifax, if she Leecomes the terminus of the great Intercolonial Rail- way, but lam not. I sincerely hope she wiil grow rapidly in population and wealth, for the more mouths she will have to feed, the hetter for us as an agricultural country. We need not fear Canadian vats entering into competition with ours, when they can realize from 38 to 40 cents a bushel for them at home, even in the winter season ; and at any rate our oats are much heavier than theirs, and when offered in competicion, up- on equal terms, will always command a higher price inany market. Our farmers, I say again, need not be afraid of the great Rail- road, even ifit should bring the grain of Canada to St. John and Halitax; it is impos- sible to foretell the great benefits and ad- vantages they will reap from the construction of that public work, which is to unite the commercially, with an iron band so strong that it will be impossible for any nation to sever it. Another bug-a-boo, that has been raised to frighten us, is the ruinous expense of opening up the great. West and widening the fosks of the Canadian Canals. Surel this is jumping before coming to the style; but on reference to the report, it will be seen that these undertaxings are not to be prose- cuted until the state of the finances will per- mit. The opponenis of Union have se d in their own minds that Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick are determined to con- spire together and ruin us by taxation, if we join them. We were once called the garden of Canada, and, I believe, she will receive us asa pet child, and will do all in her power to advance our interests and to give life and energy to our a our commerce, and our fisheries. We know that the soldiers of Montealm were fed with rations of Salmon caught off our own St. Peter’s. Mr. Cartier, the descendant of the great discoverer of Ca- nada, is too fund of the Maritime element to consent to any legislation that would tend to injure usasa people. The rivairy and jen- lously will be hetween Upper and Lower Ca- nada; they are antagonistic in religion, race, and interests, and, 1 believe, the Maritime Provinces will bold the balance wheel be- ment of the Confederacy. Of all the objections which have been raised to the Confederation Scheme, by our anti-Unionists, those based apon our liabi- lity to be called upon for our quota of men and money for the defence of Canada, ap- pear to me to be the most flimsy. If fortti- cations be required for the defence of Canada, it will be payee ne A just to ea!l upon the peo- ple of P. EB. Island to pay their proportion, according to population, of the cost of con- structing those fortifications ; aud equally so would it be to call upon them, for the same purpose—the defence of (anada—fcr their quota of men, on the eame scale—that of pulation ; for both would be for the defence of our commen country, Our anti-Unionists, who base their objections to Confederation yet or disregard the fact that the safety of} Canadz, or of Nova Scotia, or of New Brun- swick, is the safety of Prince Edward Is- land; or that, if Canada should fal) under the power of American invaders, we should fall with her? Or, is their feeling of lo7zal- ty and attachment to the Mother Country 80 weak, that, in case of even only a warlike demonstration on the part of the United States, against British America—not actual invasion of our territories—they would be ready basely to submit and seek refuge under the Stars and Stripes? An hon. gentleman, one of our Delegates, said the other evening, in his speech upon this great quesition, at the Temperance Hall, that, in case the United States of America should make a warlike demonstration against the British American Colonies, our wisest course would be to succumb to them at once; for all the resistance we would be able to make would be in vain. A sentiment such as this can- not, I trust, find much acceptance among the loyal, brave, and patriotic peoples ot British America. No! Rather inspirited by the remembrance of the glorious deeds of their ancestors, they will be ready and eager, should the dire necessity arrive, to encount- er the invaders of our svil—how imposing soever their aspect—how numerous, well ap- pointed, and disciplined soever they may be —and bravely, even cheerfully, to shed their blood, and lay down their lives for the pre- servation of their rich inheritance, the price- less treasure of British freedom. No! Never, I trust, will even the small population of Prince Edward Island listen to such base, such cowardly, such ungenerous sugyestions Let us rather refer to the spirit-inspiring re- cords of history—let us there read-and learn what great deeds have been"performed, what great victories have been obtained, what formidable invasions have been cepelled by hearths to sing the song of victory. What 1 desire is to see the peoples of British North America elevated to a common level with their brethren at home ; for when they shall once have attained to that posi- tion, 1 am confident they will be fuund to have the ability to maintain it; and I shall then have a country of my own, poss- essing all the rights of citizenship of the great empire of which we are a part—a vountry of which I shall feel [ have every reason to be proud. That the contest between the United States, on the one hand, and Great Britain ard the British American Provinces, on the other, will not, if 1¢ take place—as there is but too much reason to believe it will—be carried on upon the soil of Prince Edward Island, ought, however, to be a matter of the greatest thankfulness to us all ; and, for which, rich and poor, high and low, married and unmarried, ought to go upon their knees and fervently to thank the Almighty. Much as we read in the papers concerning the suicidal war at present being carried on in the United States, we can form but feeble conceptions of the blood, the havoc, the ravages, the devastation, and cruelties which mark the tracks of the con- tending armies : and never, I trust, will such awful and heart-rendering pictures as*they present be realized upon the soil of Prince Kdward Island. With these remarks, Mr. Chairman, I conclude; and shal] be happy to resign my position, as a speaker, in favour of any other individual who may wish to address the meeting on tae momentuous question con- cerning which I have so freely spoken, and for the discussion of which we have assembled this evening. Before I sit down, however, I feel it right to say t. at | am very sensible o! the patient, courteous, aud impartial hearing simply a few hundreds of brave apd patri- | Otic men, inspired by a love of freedom and detestation cf tyranny and oppression, even when opposed to all the warlike pride, pomp, and confidence of apparently overwhelming numbers. Rather than listen to the coun- sels of those who would advise cowardly sub- mission to the enemy of Britain, let us, with stout and true hearts, held ourselves pre- pared nobly and loyally to perform our part in the defence of our common country, the borders of Canada. of New Brunswick, or elsewhere. Should our Republican neigh- bors attempt to subjugate these Provinces to their rule, if the peoples thereof are true to sires have descended to their sons—they will be foand able to delepd every inch of their territories. If they possess the spirit which animated their sires, which animated the Greeks of old, they will not yield their soil to the invaders, nor allow the sanctity of their homes to be desecrated by the presence and ruthless deeds of a ruffan soldiery, I do uot say that these Provinces can, at present, raise such an army as would enable them, were they so disposed, to become sue- cess'ul invaders of another country; but I du say, that they can raise such bodies of troops, fur their defence, as, if animated-—as I am convinced they would be—by the yalorous spirit of vie races from which they are de- scended, would render them invincible in re- pell.ng foreign invasion. | Should this threatened invasion of British | America take place~should it commence by an invasion of Canadian terriory, We, iD Prince Edward Island, will not, it is true, be | exposed to the awful calamities, the dreadful borrors,and fearful ravages which it will bring | Prince Edward Island should enter inte the Union. | upon the Cenadians But shall we lend them ho assistance ? | their miseries? whether the assault may be commenced on) themselves—if the spirit and blood of the! which bas been accorded me, by this very | !arge and most respectable meeting, notwith- | standing that the majority are—so at least | 1 believe—opposed to the views and senti- | ments which | entertain with respect to the subject of my remarks. For the very fair and courteoas hearing which they have given me, L, therefore, beg they will be pleased to accept my most respectful acknowledgments. The honorable and learned gentleman was repeatedly cheered during the delivery of | his Speech, and, at its cunclusion, he was greeted with a very hearty round of applause. [A letter from the Hon. Mr. Whelan to his Worship the Mayor, accounting for, and japologising fur bis absence, and containing | briefly his views on the question of Confede- | ration, was then read, and received with many manifestions of respect and applause. The letter appeared in our last No. in the summary account of the proceedings of the Meeting. speaker, and his speech is as follows: — ] Hon. Mr. COLES.—Mr. Chairman, two gen- | tflemen having new spoken in favor of Union, on the basis of the Report of the Quebee Couference —-the Hon. Mr. Haviland in person and the Hon. Mr. Whelan by letter—I presume I may now fairly claim to be heard on the other side of the question. I must say that I quite agree with much that has just been said by the Hon. Mr. Haviland; and 1 may alse observe that there wes a general agreement between bis views and my own, a8 expressed during the sitting of the Con- vention in Canada ; but. perhaps, be is uot disposed The Hon. Mr. Coles was the next! and most beneficially extended? And have not our farmers been greatly and wust materially | benefited by the extension of our trade? More) wealthy men in their station of life may be found | in some other countries; but a more contented, intelligent, aud respeetable class of men, than are | our own well-to-do farmers, are not, I firmly be- lieve, to-be found in any couutry ; and, as their faithin] friend and representative, I cannot, I will uot, consent to any scheme of Union with the rest of the British North American Provinces which would be so fatally prejudicial to their in-| terests as, [am convineed, such a Union would be, if based upon the terms laid down in the Re- port of the Quebee Conference. And not only, as respects trade and agriculture, have we wade great and rapid progress, but the learning among the mass of the people under our Free Educational System, has been such as, I believe, has never been surpassed in any other country; and, as trained under it, the youth of this Isiand, at this day, cannot be excelled by those ot similar standing in society, in any other country, either old or new, in the world. Politically also, eur progress, under Self Go- vernment, bas upon the whole, been highly bene- ficial, honorable, and satisfactory to the coun- try. The machinery of the system may _per- haps, occasioually get a little out of Lae fh it may, at times, sail to work quite as swouthly and evenly, as some among us could wish; but what- ever improvements may be required in it towards rendering it more certain aud beneficial in its operations, let it be remembered we have itin our own power to make them, so long as we shall con- tinue in our present separate and independent position. That power however would be taker trom us the moment we became a member of the coutemplated Colonial Confederation; and we should, theneefurth, be nothing but an appendage to Canada: Our Constitution would be swamped and our independence forever gone. We are now a free and tidependent people, part and parcel of an empire, it net absolutely the greatest, certain- ly inferior to no other in the world; and, as part and pareel of that empire we are entitled to claim its protection, and to participate in all the edvan- tages, which, in any other portion of it, are enjoy- ed by any Community of British subjects. What- ever else we may luck, we have freedom vo the fullest extent that it can be desirable. We have freedom of thought, of speech, and of public dis- cussion. England has not more than this. What more then can we want as a peonle? Are we dissatisfied? do we undervalue all the blessings which, as a prosperous aud free people. under a Constitution and Government of our own, we en- joy, because we are not avatiua? The aspiration of the Hon. Mr. Haviland, he has told us, is to have a nation of his own. Now, for my own part, 1am quite as well satisfied—and so, I believe, are the vast majority of the people of Prince Ed ward Island—to remain as we are, under the shelter and protection of the glorious old Flag ot England, without being subjected to enormous taxation, as we would be—not, indeed, as “a | nation’? but simply as a petty portion of a Federa- tion of Provinces, in the Legislature of which our representative voice would have no weight or influence whatever, when raised on behalf of our own separate interests. We are certainly only a small Colony ; but, as such, in our present iselat- ed and independent position, we are bet subject to taxation, either on account of an eXpensive system of national government, or for the support of a national navy orarmy, or for the erection of fortifications and other works fur national de- tence. But were weto enter the contemplated Confederation, on the terme laid down for our ac- ceptance in the Report of the Quebee Conference —to heavy taxation.on all these accounts, and to many other disadvantages, without any fair or adequate equivalent, we would at once subject ourselves. That such would be the case with us, in the event of our entering the Union is now noi only openly declared, but the necessity and jus- tice of our being soare stoutly maintained by our leading Unionists, as well as for our share of the $200,000 which Mr. Gray saysare to be laid out on the defences af New Brunswick, altbough not one word was said upon the subject during the sitting of the Conference, Besides the objections, Sir, which IT have already stated, I advanced at the Conference Board to the terms on which it is proposed that we shall enter jnto the contemplated Confederation, ] have, since, seen further cause to be still more strongly opposed to the proposition—and that is jen account of the unfairness practised by the Canadians with respect to the Report after its having been finally revised, corrected, and signed i to adhere as strenuously to these views in which jour sentiments at that time concurred as I am. | The only two reasons especially adduced by him, as ' those by which he is influenced in his desire that | we that, in the event of het deing so, he would have Shall we in a manner stand | a ua‘ien of his own and that for the whole Union still, the unfeeling passive spectaturs of there y.uld be but one code of Laws, imstead! p, Shall we, because it is our | of diferent ones, as is now the case, for f rears merate ¢ oS os - . | good fortune not to baye to defend our own) the several seperate and distinct Povinces. He hearthstones, or to fight at our own doors, to prevent the plundering of our property, the | | burning of our dwellings, the murder and—! | Worse than murder—the violation of our | wives, Our daughiers, and our sisters—shall | we, I say, because we are happily exempt from ull the horrors of war ourse!ves, in she spirit of the most Lase, the most cowardly | selfishness, rejoice in our exemption from | these calamities, and at the same time, | reluse to aid our brethren who are exposed | to them? The mao who would counsel such | conduct—the man who would consent to act | 80 unpatriotic, so cowardly a part, is wholly unworthy of his birth-right as a British subject. Were we, in the event of an invasion of Canada by the armies of the United States, | to remuin, as It were, passive spectators of the calamities and horrors which the Canadians | the finger of universal scorn would be pointed | at us, and the records of history would be | memorials to our lasting disgruce. But no! | We will never act so ungenerous, so dastardly a part. We will remember what history | informs us a few brave, loyal, and patriotic | men can accomplish, even when opposed to the most fearful odds; and, shoulder to. shoulder with our brethren of Canada, Nova, Scotia, and New Brunswick, in the day of | danger and conflict, we will emulate the. , tection of their homes and the preservation on these grvands, are labouring to preseat to | Island spirit and the deede of those who, of old, bravely and successfylly fought for the pro- | of their freedom. Let us remember and be inspirited by the records of the glorious! triumphs of the little States of Greece in the cause of freedom. In those records, we read how bravely and successfully the Athenians, with only about 10,000 men opposed the in- vasion of Attica, by the generals of Darius, king of Persia, at the head of one hundred and twinty thousand men. Again, we find there, how with equal bravery and success, when, ten years afterwards, Xerxes, the son and successor of Darius upon the Persian throne, invaded Greece, leading on, for bis} purposed conquest, an army which amounted to upwards ot two millions of nten, he was bravely withstood, and successfully repelled by @ handful of Athenian and Spartan troops, bot amounting to more than eleven thousand two hundred men, commanded by the Athe- nian general, Themistocles; and, in those records, we also read the ingpiriting relation of the death of Leonidas and his three huodred Spartans, at the Straits uf Lhermo- pyla, in their glorious attempt to cheek the por of the invaders of their country. he jealousies which subsisted between the rival States of Athens and Sparta were very great ; but we find that, in the time of their common danger, they forgot their animosities, and united their powers for the proteetion of theic common liberties and freedom. We also find that, when the army of Darius in- vaded Attica, the Platawans, although hun- dreds of miles distant from the scene of danger, nobly and generously sent one thousand soidiers, to assist their Athenian brethren ; and so, | trust —when the hour of trial shall arrive—wi'l the peuple of Prince Edweid Island assist the Canadians to resist the invasion of the common enemy. As to the numbers of their inhabitants and the extent of their territories, the States of Athens and Sparta were both comparatively insigoificant powers; yet these States, with very little assistance from the inferior re- publics, were not only able to resist, but even to bafile and defeat all the attempts of the Persian monarch upon their liberties; affording a memorable instance uf what acts ot heroism may be performed by men anima- ted by a love of freedom wad tlie ivstitutions of their country The courage, the pateictisa, the bonds of nnion among the peeple of these Provinces. will not, in the day of danger and trial, | confidently trust. be found interior to those of the hervie Greeians of whom [ have just spoken ; and our own people, scorning the counsel of those who are unworthy of their birthright as Britieh subjects, will, | proudly hope, be found as ready and willing to assist their Srethren of Canada, in their hour of need, as were the Plataans to assist their brethren of Athens against the invading army of Persia. Yes: when the dark days of Canada come, the sons of Prinee Edward » will not * sit down by the waters of for the punpose of encouraging emigranis to ae oe sts ad the country the most the etl the Dr ig. tne dar atendind fos = 2 oe and weep,”’ Their, in those days, ill be a nobk ore spirited, a wor wishes to build up a nation for himself; be longs for a new stste of political existenee in a Federal Union of these Provinces, in order, no doubt, that he may obtzin a larger field for his | ambition; but, for my part, a8 a native of little | Prince Edward Island, I shull be perfeetly well satisfied if we are allowed inerely te remain precisely as we are under the protection of Great Rritain. We have a Coustitution, unsurpassed, unequalled by that of any other in the world. We have not only full coutrol over our own i7Danees ; but, with the exception of the Lieutenant Gev- ernor, the people have the xe to select every public officer from one end of the Island to the other. The Lieut. Governor, it is true, is ap- pointed by the Imperial Government; but, be it remembered that, whilst so appointed, his salary is also paid by the Iinperial Government. We are, in our present position, as tree as any people upon the face of the globe. We bave—what they have not in Great Brtain—universal suffrage ; would have to endure in consequence of it, and we have in fact greater power over those | who manage our affairs than is possessed by the people of the Mother Country. 1 believe that the existing colanial system, as it respects Prince Edward Island, is all that can be reasonably de- sired; and, therefore, I do not wisk to see it changed on the terms proposed. In their desire for the formativn of the propesed Confederation, the leading men of Canada are undoubtedly in- fluenced by many good and weighty reasons. To the Cauadians, both internally and externally, it would certainly be highly beneficial and advauta- geous. The advantages also, both immediate and prospective, which would be derived from it, by Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, asd Newfoundland, on their entering into it on the terms proposed to | them, are so obvious that 1 am potat all surprised | that many of the leading public men in these Pro- vinces are zealous aud cuergetic iu their advocacy of the measure. But how advantageous soever it may be admitted it would be to the other Provinces 1 tend, far syperior to that which we would beve to | to rearrange the whole representative seale ; accept in lieu of it, should we consent to enter into the Confederotjon on the terms laid down for our acveptguge in the Report of the Conven- tion. We fought long and strenuously for the ex- tinction of the old cloge and oligarchical system of goverument which was zo lung maintained in the Islaud, to the repression, not only of the hovest aud honourable aspirations of many for official positions of trust and honor in oyr Jittle state, but to the positive social degradation apd political enthralment of the great body of the people, held in slavish subjection to the will of a few, whom neither superior talents ner the rights of birt, but merely adventitious cireuustayces had given the power to rule over and oppress they. Yes,, ] ; P Sir, for the vbolition of that aysten:, so repugrant| #/ eecasious in whieh our interests should be to the feelings of every true lover of his country, and so subversive of all those noble and generous sentiments which induce men to aspire to dis- tinction in the service of their country, bravely and persistently we fought, and victory, at length was ours. The vld worn out system of oligar- chical rule and exclusiveness was completely set aside; and the establishmeut of Self or Respon- sible Government was the crowning act of our victory, By the concessivn to us of this form of Government, by the Imperial Authorities, the brand of inleriority was effaced from our brow; we were ackuowledged us a people worthy to enjoy ail the privileges of British Constitutional freedom, and capable of exercising them in a manner the most honorable and beueticial to our- selves, aud satisfactory to the Imperial Powers. And that we were so, Sir, has, I think, been evi- denced, most fully aud satisfactorily by the pro- gress which, since the inauguration of Self Go- vernwent in the Island, we have made in every direction in which it jg possible for a »ple to @dvauece. Have we not improved with respect o commerce? Flas vot ¢ Je_beey i , ‘| were T am convinced that, upon the terms and condi- | | expressive of them, upon record. No wonder, at Montrea). Since the breaking up of the Con- | vention, they have taken upon themselves, with- |out consulting the Delegates of the Maritime | Provinces, te alter that Report. As it stood when | finally agreed to—and signed, although, net by | myself—the Local Governments were empowered to define the Electoral Districts for the Federal | Parliament, and to rearrange them when necessa. ;ry. But, by the alteration whieh the Canadians, }of their own accord, have made in the Report, the Local Governments have been stripped of even that power; so that our Local Legislature would, if brought under the Constitution set forth jin the Report, be @ mere nonentity, and be | possessed of less power than our City Carpara- }tion, The want of integrity evidenced ip thos | tampering with the Report, adords us 3 proof of | the uofair consideration whieh we might expect | to receive, at the hands of the Canadians, were | we once bound up with them, for the furtherance wf their ewn interests, in the Confederation ; ard should, of itself, be sufficient to determune us to have noting te do with it. At the commencement of the Session of the Conference, it was agreed, and fully understood respects, be regulated and governed by the rules and principles whieh obtain im the Canadian Parliament-- which are alimest identieal with those of our Honse of Assembly—by a due observance of Which, every Delegate, on the resumption of the Chair, by the Chairman of the Convention, would bave had an opportunity of again moving any and every Resolution which he had failed to carry in Committee; and of having it put to the vote, by the Chairman, and a division of the whole Convention taken upon it; by which means, exactly as in Parliament, his rejected Resolutions, with the divisions of the Convention upen them, would have been duly |recorded, Had this agreement or understanding, Sir, been honestly adhered to, L certainly could | have had no reason to complain of the manner in which the proceedings ef the Convention were gentlemen, could any better proof be requit- fed that this Union is sought to be brought by us all, that our proveedings should, im atl; had been asked what reductions they could regulated. I should have been perfectly well /recorded, But so far was this from being the lease, that the agreement was completely set aside; the votes were taken one for each of the several six divisions of the contemplated Confe- | deration; and in Committee dissentient Delegates peremptorily denied an opportunity of tious, or which it is proposed that Prince Edward | placing eitives nels tent butions, ov Pretante Island shall be taken or admitted into it, the Federation, were she to enter into it, would be ruinous to her best interests. It has, indeed, | been confidently asserted, again and again, that | the principles laid down in the Report of the| Quebee Convention are not only just to the several Provinces, but, morcever, that they are especially just and liberal to Prince Edward Island. Now, Sir, I hold. on the contrary, that instead of being just and lideral to Prince Edward Island, the Report is, in almost every respect the very reverse. The ‘hon. and learned gentleman, who has just addressed the meeting, seems to be inflated by the vain hope of the distinction to which some of the leading public men of Prince Edward Island would attain, should she become an inte gral part of the Great Federation so earnestly advocated by him. But I argue that we have, | in discussing this question, to consider something of far wore importance to the people than the vain Lope of the personal aggrandizement of a few of our leading public men. The gra’ifieation of their ambition would be but a sorry con sideration in exchange for the subverted independence of our Government. The Con- stitution under which we now live is, I con- then, that, in the form in which the Report has been made public, it should appear to have been unanimously agreed to by all the Delegates. No wonder, then, that the Governor General should have regarded the Report as the embodiment of the unanimeus decisions vf the Conference, and that he should, in bis Despatch to the Colonial Secretary, Mr. Cardwell, have represented it as being so, and that the latter should have dealt with it a8 such—nothing having appeared on the Minutes of the Conference to the contrary. The Hon. Mr. Haviland has said that we—the Delegates—were unanimous; but I say we were not. Phe representation claimed by us—the P. E. Island Delegates — in the Federal House of Commons, was six members—twe for each of our three Counties. It is certainly true that we —the P. E. Island Delegates — were unanimous in requiring that we should be allowed six repre- sentatives in the Lower House of the Federa) Parliament, but it is also true that five of the other Provinees, by their Delegates, voted against us; and, to our request, it was objected that, should we be aliowed the number of representa- tives that we claimed as justly due to ua in the | Lower House, the Convention would be obliged and that in yielding us six, it would be necessary, in order to preserve a due observance of the prin- _ciple of representation according to population, that Canada shotild be allowed nine or ten more, in addition to the number which had been already assigned to them on that principle. It was also further objected that such an increase to the number of representatives would necessarily oc- | salished with it, because then my views, on whieh how large our revenue may b:-come—even I was outvoted, would have been fairly and fully | it increases to £150,000 a ycar—the balan@ casion a serious increase to the annual expenses of the Federal Parliament. So they acted, so they reasoned, and so they decided against us on the theirs may be taken asa fair sample of the justice and sympathy which, should we enter iuto the Confederation, we might expect to experience on , found to condict in any way with those either of Canada, of Nova Seotia, or of New Brunswick. it js pot my intention, Sir, to follow the hon. and learned gentleman, Mr. Haviland, over all the grougg which he bus traversed in his endea- vours to proye that, were we to enter into the projected Dujen, the results would be conducive to the promotiug sf our best interests, and in his atlempts to shew=>ghat can be more ridiculous ? —that the opening up of the far West would open up to ys 2 greater, a more certain, and a more advantageous warket for the gale of our agricul- tural produge, | sha}) eyntent inyself with shew- ing that the wrws of Union set farth in the Re- port are so far from being simply tair to Prince Edward Island that they are pasitively most unjust. {Owing to illness on the pert of our Re- porter, we regret to state that he hes been unable to extend the whole of Mr. Coles's score of representation; and this decision of | speech, and, we magt, 10 conseguenge, re- Se ve VU pest No. Py dN BIDE vi ernment; and even the power to levy a dee rect tax upon ourselyes is not gran al Government. entail upon the Colony, is variously estimat— ed, at from £25,000 to £35,000 a year. f Mr. Archibald McNeill folldWtd Mr. Coley whose speech is unreported fur the aaine rea: son. The on. George Beet was the hext to speak, and as he had committéd hig tetharks to paper, we are enabled to give thei ig thie connection. The Rev. George Sutherland delivered ae very excellent speech at one of the adjourned . meetings, the report of which has been furs nished to us, but want of space compels ug to postpone its insertion. } Hon. GEO. BEER.—Mr. Chai subject now under consideration mye! nr with consequences to the inhabitants of P E. Island of such magnitude and im “ as to demand from every intelligent indivi. os ane us the most serious investi ith propriety, the question may be me : Why id you ‘tector in the sab A Why not leave it in the hands of those are much better able to grapple with such a gigantic subject than yourself? In reply, I would observe that, although having but the one talent, 1 know no reason why, at such e critical and dangerous time, that one talens should be wrapped ina napkin and hid Mr. Chairman, the isbabitants of P. E. rs land weigin a most dangerous position. Jf appeared,some few months sinee, that al. most, if net every one of our Jeadi Potiti- cians had sad a glimpse at what Mr, Whe- lan calls the ** golden prospect,”’ and about to hurry us into the Confederation nolens volms. The Islander, with its leading articles is favour ef Union, was ja hard to bas the public mind in that direc. tion, eves before the meeting of the Dele- gates. The Laammer, that had, for monthe before, denounced every idea of Confedera- tion asant‘expensive absurdity,’ a*-sbam,’” ke. &e.,—the Examiner, 1 say, all at once Toned. Tcame out wee ety a eT, the thought I would sound an aijarm, if I could do nothing more, and, if I rewember correet- ly, the very week after that the editor of the Examiner got completely over the fence, and an interehange of compliments began with the editor of the Examiner, the editor — of the Islander, and, | may say, the whole of the leading politicians of the Colony. Ip fact, they appeared nearly all to be riding — along most triumphantly in the same coach, © [ thought we were sold, without even know. ing the ‘terms’ of sale. It was easy ty — ‘magine what a torrent of eloquence and de. ciamation, what an amount of special plead. ing and sophistry (if necessary) would be brought to bear on the subject , the editom of tho Islander and Examiner would Ja in their sleeve at the coalition that had taken place, and at the unquescionable that, by their joint efforts, the public senti- ment could be directed in just such a channel as would float it into the Union. Mr. Chairman, | feel proud to think that my fears are not likely to be realized; for we have at least two of the Delegates to the Quebec Convention, two natives of P. EB. Is land, the Hon. Mr. Palmer aad the Mon. Mr. Vvles, who will not eonsept to sell the birthright of their fellow ovlenists for a mere— mess of pottage. F The objection to our being absoaded in this Union. on the terms agreed on at Fs bee, have been so clearly set forth by Mr, Laird, Hon. Mr. Coles and others as to ob, viate any necessity of my entering at large on the subject; but, with your peruussion, | will offer a few remarks on two or three points. ay The question may well be asked, how came there to be any talk or negociation im re — ference to a Union with Canada, sinee the Legislature of P. E. Island had no sueh mea. sure before it, nor did it contemplate authorise the sending of Delegates to da, nor bas it been urged epon the Island the British Government? Sir, it origi : alone in the ** political necessities’ of Canada, — in proof of whieh, | beg %o quote from the lion. A, T. Galt, the greas Canadian finan. _ cier, as follows: ‘In coming forward, as we were objiged to do from the necessities of the — ease, to consider a remedy for our own evils, &e., &e. Events, as they were aware had _ ripened rapidly during the last two or three — years, and within the present year, they had seen the machine of government almost brought toa dead lock, ke , &c. In vonela- sion, he would remark that the political ne ceasities of Canada seemed to render a mea-_ sure of union of all the Provinces of British — North Ameviea necessary in itself.’’ Task, — awe MEAS ist ‘wh about for the especial benefit of Canada? We are expected to surrender our c»nstitu-— tion and revenue to the Genera) Government, and to receive, for our local wants, a fixed sum for alltime to come. Mr. Galt says, ** The gentlemen from the Lower Provinces wake in the Giovernment of the several Colo — pies, etc. Pringe Kaward Island would re duce her expenditure from $170,000 to $121,000, ete., ete. It was proposed to take away from them every source of revenue they possessed, except minor local revenue and then to give them, from the publie ebe a sufficient subsidy to enable the machine to work, ete., ete. If they inereased tl expenses in proportion to the growth of pop ulation, they would be ob iged to resort wl” direct taxation.’® Gentlemen, this is pretty plain; aod, [ can assure you, it is a fact tha during the last fifteen years, our require ments and expenses bave increased at th rate of about £2,000 a year; but, from hence — forth, no matter how much we way need ot over and above our allowance, is, fur all to come, to be remitted tu the General Gor Gouin without the special permission of the Ge a Weare expected voluntati- ly to swhmit to the most huwiliating subjece— tion that can be conceived, and to become a — mere appendage to Canada, being virtually if not actually, distranchised The annual loss that Confederation wou have little doubt that it will be nearer the 30 than 20; but, for the sake of argument, we will suppose it only £20,000 a year to commence with. Let us suppose the Island fo have gone into Confederation some twelve months since, the financial year having end ed a few days since, the officer of the Gener al Government for the collection of revenue finds he has £20,000 on hand, after paying | over to the Local Government their allow ance, which he is instructed to remit imme diately to Ottawa; consequently exchange # the value of £20,000, is required forthwith L would ask the business men of P. E. Island — what would be the effect of such a demanl — upon the available resources of the Culony’ is it not a well known fact that scarcely oy’ passes—even now—without consider le difficulty being experienced in the obtait® ing of exchange for remittance-? Confede ration would not increase our exports, ® sterling exchange; but the balance of revel ue, received over and above our allowane — -would have to be remitted to the Ge Government, and a keen competition w take place between the collector of reventl and the merchant in the purchase of & change; and, if sterling bills could not # obwined, our specie would be taken awaf, and. as this new drain of the resources of Colony would continue and increase, further effect would be that exchange woul become dearer, the merchants’ goods woul” advance in price, the country would g& cunpiecsi, drained of all its gold and silv® coin, our Banks would have to close, and would be thrown back to where we were quarter of a century since. The only wih to avoid this impending calamity, is polite) to give a negative answer to the invitati®® to enter this one-sided partnership. _ The above calculation is based on the supp® tion that, by the assimilation of our tariff ow * present Ca:adian tariff, there would be a balait of at least £20,000 a year against the Culotf but we have ne pened whatever to suppose the Canadian tariff can be continued at so arate as 20 per cent. The proeent annual penditure of Canada is about $10,000,000; for a number of years past, their income has len short of expenditure, from one to two dvuJars per year. 1364 is, I believe, the out of the last ten, that they have been to make the two ends meet. The esti 2 bow in coMP he ¢ interest 8 veut, would be $4