.l', 9.5"“ for me to 33 th tS. work. It 18 a. mere imfiostfiref: Walter Tfli ’IILE SOCIETY.—AQ person who may be F ' to read the repOrts of the British and Bible Society, cannot fail to be highly an: ed in contemplating the success with which it pleased Almighty God to crown its exertions in the distribution of 12,084,520 co ies of Bibles Testaments from the depot in thdon, exclusivemotl 8,210,176 copies issued by societies abroad. If one portinn OfIthIe Society’s labour is to be exalted above anot er, it is the carrying on and promotinw the translation of the Sacred Scriptures into this) lan- guages and dialects of the earth. It may surely excite ohuIr astonishment that during the short space of '- Irty~slx years much more should have been effected towards the universal dissemination of the Biblein all languages of the earth than had been preViously effected train the beginning of the Chris- tian era. Previously, about seventy translations made the Scriptures accessible to about one-fourth of the population of the earth; but it is the honour of the Bible Society to have placed the sacred vo- lume Within Ithe possible reach of 600,000 000 of souls, Iwho might otherwise have hoped in vain to read in their ‘own tongue the wonderful works of God. I “ So mightily grew the word of God and prevailed.”—Report read at a. late Public .Meeting‘. I There has been an unusually severe and destruc- twe storm inI Scotland. A correspondent of the GlasgowI Courier gives an account ofthe calamitous destruction of human life. “The gentleman in whose house I spent last night, has lost no fewer than twelve of his tenants by the hurricane oflast Wednesday Ise’nnight; and his loss is comparatively small. I ViSited a family yesterday, consisting of father, mother and five daughters, whose sole liveli- hood dependIed on the exertions of the eldest bro- ther, who, With five others of the most able seamen of the whole island, perished. In another house, close by, the father and son have perished, leavinv aIlarge number of children in the most helpless conc- dition. There are, indeed, fourteen whole families deprived of their heads, and cast lonely and unpro- tected on the world. The whole of Shetland is full of lameiitation and woe ; all mirth has deserted the island ; the appearance of almost every countenance is totally different from what it was last.‘ The bra:- ) . vest seamen and the best fishers have lost all cou- rage—they have no heart to venture to sea again, and no hope of success if they do. The storm of 1832, in which eighteen boats and upwards of a “hundred men were lost, was not at all so strong and terrible as this. WVhen at Mossbank, I lodged with a poor Iwidow, whose husband and son left their house in a boat, and twenty minutes after their de- ire, wIere overtaken by a gale, perishing with ve others in presence of the wife and family, but a short distance from their own door. In another place, at Buxta, the laird had four sons and a ne— hew (a clergyman), who, with the servant, all per- ished in crossing the sound in front of their house,‘ while returning from a party of fi'iends. But the havoc of the storm was by no means confined to the sea, for the injury by land is Of a very distressing nature. Iwas on Monday se’nnight over some of the islands of the West, where I saw whole fields of corn completely destroyed. You would have ima- gined that every ear had been purposely cut ed by means of some particular instrument, for the whole, field had precisely that appearance.” GLASGOW Uivivnitsrrr.—Election of a Professor of Divinity—On the 215t October, the long-talked-of election of a Professor to fill the divinity chair in , our University, vacant by the death of the late Dr. l M‘Gill, took place in the Common Hall. The elec- tion ended in the unanimous return of the Rev. Dr. Hill, of Dailly. The appointment is considered to be worth upwards of a thousand a-year, with a free house. On Tuesday, Sir James Graham was instal- led in his ofiice of Lord Rector of this University. After the ceremony, which took place in the Com- mon Hall, the right hon. bai‘onet expressed his gra- tification for the high honour which had been con- ferred upon liim.—-Gla3gow Chronicle. UNITED STATES. THE NORTH EASTERN BOUNDARY.—A correspon- dent of the Boston .Mercantile Journal, writing from Bangor, says— ‘91::- “Two of the young men who accompanied the Boundary Commissioners, have arrived in this city. I am informed that the whole ground has been care- fully examined, and that the Commissioners are on their return. Their report will probably come to us by the way of Washington ; and.until we get it, we must put up with such information as may casually fall from those connected with the expedition. ‘ “I am informed that there is not a doubt upon the minds of the Commissioners, that the line claimed by the Americans is the true line ; and that no per- son who makes the examination, with the intention 0f ascertaining the truth, can arrive at any other conclusion. This, 1 have no doubt, is correct; and all we want, to bring this irritating question to a close, ' iflenergetic and determined action on the part of the Government.” THE HIGHLANDS.——The Gardiner (Me.) Spectator, contains the following extract of a letter to a gentle} man in Gardiner, from Professor RenWick, oneIo - the Engineers engaged in the Boundary Survey .— “I am happy to be able to communicate tonou, that the result of my operations Will probably Inge i no other basis for the British claim, than the qpi e Whether the Bay of Fundy be the Atlanticf 0621:: I have discovered and explored a range 0 ingphe 11in: extending from the Bay of Chaleur, aropIrIi Is— huds of the branches of the St. John, to the emi d toth P0 we; so that even on 'the B11051; Igrqililn ‘7 that the highlands tare necessar'ineniItéiIigfii: gst,the:y ‘ with to a vantage. _ . I wmlyii? 1 can only guess at, until I make up the ‘ calculations.” _—— NOVA SCOTIA. Tin: ELECTIONS.——Tlle following gentlemen have been returned :— I 5 hatcr— . s. G. w. Archibald. A a: Cami-Hon. Joseph Howe, W. Annand. Halt/211 Town—Hon. J. M‘Nab, Thos. Forrester. ‘ Pidtm County—H. Blackadar, J. Holmes. Tram—A. Archibgld. "’i'ndaor—H. Gou ge. I I III be ' f En land, by the Britannia, W1 - 0133 Ethitglx, on Thursday, the 3d day of Decem " ‘ bar, at 12 o’clock. f Caledonia and their de-I out}: Ifexld oat Miramichi, qInf “align; month, for the purpose 0 or i “Bound! Taliban Society in that place. LleIElll‘tl. " ‘noderick c Macdonsld, of the Prince _w IItI Iii-ad Militiii, and paymnster of tho 30:13 Re mIeIeI Bermuda, has forwarded to Miramlchi, [1,1 hgnsays, 1‘“ 50 presented to the society, ‘ bearing gill in; dear II; ' ’ Insoooinpsnyin letter,) ‘ many em 8 “a: ‘ bosom of true tchmen.’-—Hd§fu Jamal-I A meeting .,I madam! is ‘0 _ THE OGDEOETEAE EEEAFALDJo SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1840' The news by the mail '8 f ' . ' of no usual importancel. taught wnh Intelligence Whilst the ' ' world seemed to be depending upon thefafgrifiiitibliei of a ministry in France more inclined to carry paci- ficatory measures into effect, all at once the minis- try of M. ThiersI, representing thewar party in that (Izgpntry, has given way, before the firmness of the I ing,Iand a ministry imbued with more pacificato intentions substituted in their stead.. The successldf the allied arms in Syria'has been such, that the o- vernment of France has‘been forced to come to soiie conclusmn upon that Question, and the result has been such as we have stated. The grand question now is, will the newly formed ministry be able to stand their ground in the Chambers, which are just. on the pomt of being convoked? , To their decision the whole matter is referred. Should their decision which. Heaven avert!) prove hostile to that of the I ing, it has come to this, that his Majesty must either abdicate, or declare war at once. Royalty is somewhat at a discount in Euro _I I e t pi esent. The King of Holland and Queen Repgeiit ofISpaiIn have abdicated; the Emperor of Austria it is said, is about to abdicate, and it is conjectured that the King of France will have to abdicaté. In Imperial Russia, they are not in the habit of giving their sovereigns long time to ponder on. such mea- spres. Well may we exclaim with Shakspeare, “ Uneasy liesthc head that wears the‘crown.” 0n looking over our files Of Scotch papers the other day, we cut out of the Glasgow Herald of the 23d October last, the paragraph hereunder inserted. I‘he subject of the paragraph (the Rev. Mr. M‘Intyr’e) arrived here last Week, from Scotland, via Halifax and Pictou, at both of which places he had previ— ously preached to large and attentive congregations. On the forenoon of Sunday last the rev. gentleman preached in St. James’s Church, to the congregation oyer which he has been called to preside, and from his earnest and impressive manner, and his fervent and‘ eloquent style of delivery, we feel safe in pre- dicting that his ministrations will be crowned with success, and we most sincerely hope, that our pre- diction may be realised. Ml‘. M‘Intyre afterwards preached in Gaelic, with which language he is pe- culiarly conversant, as will appear by perusing the sulijomed paragraph, and. which is a circumstance that will greatly enhance the value ofhis services to a numerous portion of his large congregation. The paragraph alluded to is as follows :— I OxniNATioN.—On Friday last, the Rev. Angus Mac- intyre was ordained here, previous to his proceeding to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, having been appointed by the Colonial Committee to that interesting charge. Mr. Macintyre is a young man of high talent. The Synod of Argyll awarded liim the premium for divinity, and the Edinburgh University the M‘Pherson’s Bursary of£100. for literary distinction. Mr. Macintyre is likewise a distinguished Celtic scholar—having trans- lated several tractiitcs for the good of his countrymen, and he carries with him a new Gaelic grammar in MS., on a condensed and popular plan, which we have no doubt will prove worthy of its author. Mr. Macinlyre, we believe, left on Saturday, via. Liverpool, Halifax, and Boston, per steamer, to join his anxious flock. many of whom are emigrants from the bounds ot'tlie Presby- tery of Mull, and his own former neighbours. On Monday night last, a man named Andrew Picket, of Savage Harbour, left a neighbour’s to go to his own house, by a short cut, at which, however, he wasnever destined to arrive. It is supppsed that he missed his path, became exhausted, laid down to rest, and perished from the effects of cold and exhaustion. A Wife and family are left to deplore their loss. Birth. On Thursday last, the \Vife of Mr. George Hooper, of a daughter. ‘ o Marries, At St. John's Newfoundland, on the 4th instant, by the Right Rev. Dr. Flemming, Captain Ronald Macdon- :ild, second son ofAlex. Macdonald, Esq. St. Margaret’s, in this Island, to Anastatia, youngest daughter oer. James Stafford ofthat town. file‘s. On the 2d October last, Mr. John M‘Arthur, of Lot 1I3, died awfully sudden, leaving a wife and five small chil- dren. The deceased;retired to bed about ten o’clock, apparently in good health, only complaining ofa slight cold, and expired in bed, by his Wife 5 side, on. the fol» lowing morning, without speaking a word. PASSENG ERS. In the Pocahontas, from Pictou, on Monday—{Charles Young, Esq. and mother; Messrs. Donald Benton, P. Gatfney, Charles Dingwell, Captain Buldvvin. PORTCOF CHflRLOTTETOWN. ENTERED: Schooner Catherine, Smith, Newfoundland; 222 bls. 'll\dFisli &c.' I . I g uglier; bGoldsniitli, JOhnston, Mirnmichl; .000 feet. Deals. Lark, Howutt, Dalhousie,IN.IB.; Goods. Jessie, Macdonald, Miramichi; ballast. Ben, Forrest, Halifax ; Goods. Speculation, Wood, do; do. I Regulator, Hayley, do.; do. Betsey, Burlioe, do.I; do. I Nora Creina, Brundige, PiIctou; do. Mermaid, Deming, do.; pickled Fish. ‘ CLEARED: D I N.rio HC on, Limerick; 36,000 feet as s, SChog‘gfdnseBirbh Tlglllbel", 9 corgsIIiatthwood. ' l , M‘Millan Pictou‘ a as . gildiiiztfiohnsmn, llalifax; 209 bus. Oats, 200 do. Barley. I I f t ' ' -' tl rin ham Liverpool, 16,000. as Br'grifiiSIEib ib‘iisnl-larfiwooii Timber, 12 cords Lath- wood. Schooner Novelty, do. Pork, &c.\ Stevens, Pugwnsh; 13 bis. Flour, 3 /' l o W’estmarland Thos. NiIsbett, Master, 1' OTIIhEIEle tiling to Cork for o’rders, put in here go t e erveiiirig of the 24th inst, withIltIiiss of Chain and best Iower ' waitin a Wln . AThng-lalgfols Willa, frogi .Richibucto, bound to Exgloulihs, ' bei- laden, struck upon a reef ofi' FlatI River, abouItj nIn et pm the shoi'e about 10 o’clock on theIiiight of Tuesgay lag], £3120 minutes'aflei' she struck, tiIlleIId wplli wIanteti'I.1e gItPI‘solfozps ' th crew lan e an e y i I . Sfbslie‘ifiitei‘iigjms‘hgd wig got off the bar, and now lies at anchor between the shore and the bar, dismasted. d I cIo‘eIreeIIed On Mondav evening last, asmall Brig, unbe d I sque ' to sail with flag flying athalf-mast, was 0 serge p on mam tliJe ml at the entrance of the harbour of St. I eterIshI’un 393'? by Maserati: trams. .... t ee w I , "if" duhgdlfih t‘li’d‘ldrgvlil.—Her cargo conSisted of6,00I(I) bpsl‘igl; Whiting“ whicyh, together with htgikzssselfipyla: mamas: ago“, c I . ' "gill—wa Edd-2:12;: 3:]: oupd in the cabin, it appeared that ‘:he‘ belonged to Londonderry, iii I ,I I.“ l 1,619.4, and sailed im from Que’beC—bul no entry had been made subse uent to Thursday Iweek. There. were no boats on board. T e vessel’s name is II:he lift-Illa, W. Mitchell, master. We understand She has been ta en c iargIe of by the aresl magistrate (John JardinE, Esq.), and is now in a place 0 safety. ' mom:va SDCIET—Y. GENERAL Meeting of the Highland- Society ofP. E. Island, will take place on Monday evening next, 30th inst, at 8 o'clock, p. m. at the Com- inerCial liin, when a punctual attendance is particularly requested. JOHN M‘NEILL, Wm. M‘GILL, . E Secretaries. Charlottetown, Nov. 23d, 1840 WINTER MAILS. WINTER ROUTE 10 COMMENCE THE lst DECEMBER. MAILS for Pictdu, Halifax, 6L6. &c., Will close on Tuesday, at 10 o'clock, a. m. The Western Inland Mails at the same time. The Eastern Inland Mails on Wednesday, at 12, noon. The Mails for Vernon Rwar,Belfast, Gem'getoion, and Murray Harbour, on Saturday morning, MB o'clock. All to go weekly. ' E. CHAPPELL, P. M. Post Office Nov. 23d, 1840. I O T I C E.—The Subscriber will LET, av AUCTION, to the lowest bidder, several BRIDGES to beriiilt on the new line ofrnad leading from head of Cardigunto Mount Stewart. Sale to take place at the respective places where the Bridges are to be done, on Wednesday, the Sixteenth day’of December next, and commence at the Southern Brook of the Morel, on the 5th mile, at Eleven o'clock,forenoon. THOMAS OlVEN, Commissioner. Nov. 19,1840. ALL persons who have had Smith's Work I done by the Siibscriber,'since his commencement in business in that line, in this Town, and which has not been paid for, are hereby cautioned against paying the same, or any part thereof, to any other than the Subscri- ber, without his written order for that pur ose. o THOMAS PARSONS, Blacksmith. Prince Street, Charlottetown, 27th Nov., 1840. CAUTION T0 LUMBERERS AND OTHERS. NOTICE is hereby given, that all persons are prohibited from cutting Timber on that part of Lot 49, mortgaged by the late Mr. J. Cambridge to Messrs. Haythorne & Wright, Bankers, Bristol. N. B.-—Tlie Boundaries of the above properl having been defined by the Commissioners appointed or estab- lishing Boundary Lines, the Subscriber is determined to punish all trespassers. ' EDWARD C. HAYTHORNE. ,Charloltetown, 2lsl Nov. 1840. THE COLONIAL HERALD. (Netti fictive.) HE Publishers of the COLONiAi. HERALD, intending to enlarge and otherwise improve their Newspaper at the commencement of ilie Ngw Year, respectfully request, that ALL PERSONS indebted to them will immediately settle their respective accounts, in order that they may be enabled salisfactdrily to, meet the in- creased iind, otherwise, ruinous expenses which will necessarily be incurred in carrying their intentions into effect. Theyuilso beg leave gratefully to acknowledge the very liberal support they have hitherto received from the public generally, and respectfully solicit a continu- ance of thatsupport, hoping, by their unwearied atten- tion to the,public interest, and the independence of their political principles, to give increasing satisfaction. The NEW SERIES of the COLONIAL HERALD, al- tlilm'ghl‘f’ will contain a much greater quantity of matter than the old or present Series, will be published on the SAME TERMS as the latter, fizz—Fifteen. Shillings per annum,P. E. Island currency, payable half yearly in. advance. ‘In every case where these terms are not com- plied with, the paper will mecesssrily be discontinued. The price oftlie paper being so low,and the circulation, when compared with that of the generality of News- papers in the neighbouring Colonies, so vei' limited, it is absolutely necessary that this iule slioul be rigidly adhered to. Persons intending to subscribe for the New Series of the Herald, on immediately piiying one year's subscrip- tion in advance, will be supplied with the remaining Numbers of the current year gratis; and any person in the country or elsewhere willing to act as Agents, will be supplied with one copy gratis, for every Ten Sub- scribers they may procure, and for the regu or payment of whose subscriptions they will become responsible. Charlottetown, Nov. 2, 1840. BOOKS FOR SALE. HE Subscribers Offer for Sale, at their Store, in Pownal-street, the following collection of new and second-hand Works: I Jenks’s Comprehensive Commentary of the Bible, 6 vols., Svo. Goldsmith's Animated Nature, 3 vols. 8vo; Edmondson's Elements of Revealed Religion. Powell on Apostolical Succession. I . Mammon; or Covetousness the Sin of the Christian Church. (Prize Essay.) By the Rev. J. Hai’ris. Great Teacher: Characteristics of our Lord’s Ministry. By the same author. Britannia; or the Moral Claims of Seamen stated and enforced. (Prize Essay.) By the same. Christian Citizen. B the same. Chambers‘s Edinburg i Journal, 1832-37. Information for the People. —— Historical Newspaper. Arcana of Science and Art, 8 vols. 12mo. . Babhige's Economy of Machinery and Manufactures. Blair’s Sermons, 3 vols. 24mo. Hall’s Roots ofthe French language. French Bible, 8 v0. (Paris edition.) French Genders tau ht in six lessons. Hamilton's French rammar. do. Gospel ofSt. John. do. Perrin‘s Fables. Catechism. of French Grammar. Tales of my Landlord, 4 vols. Wood's account ofthe Edin.'Sess. School. Wilders in’s Infant Systems ' Lives 0 eminent Scotsman, 2 vols. Young Man's Companion. Diurnal Readings. Selector. ' Murray's Grammar, 12mo. do. 18mo. —— English Reader, —— Introduction to do. First Book and Sfielling Book, Turner’s Introduction to eogriiphy. Leonidas. ‘ I I I . Evans's Sketch of the various religious denominations. Walker’s Dictionaries. Moral Essa a. II f I M rtis on t e eaerva ion o si . C" ". Pi , ~ J. if. COOPER a CO. TRAYED from Greenwich (St. Peter’s), m S the month ofJuna last, a d k rod FILLY, one year and ii lialfold. Her hind legs are white, and there is a small white streak round one of the fore hoof! ; she has d also (small white star in her fbrshesd. Any person e h ill bno her to the Subscriber or Will Ive her rt Birgwell’sghlill, Ba Fortune Rodd, or at Archibald O'Hunley’s, Cablebes , will be handsomely rewarded. . ANGUS M‘AULAY. deie, Nov. 18, » - , 1840. ,"s.. .. in .... .. ,ofwood or even sawdust. AUCTIONS. 0 BE SOLD, Bit AUCTION, ‘Tlns Day (Saturday), at 12 o’clock, at White Hall, Great George Street, next door to Mr. Hooper’s‘ Shop, near the Market-House, . - A kitchen grate, stool, dresser and plate holder ; set (fuur) dish covers; tea caddie; pot hooks, bags, cushions (wool and hair); carpet (27 yards); iecns do.; mall? - ny night commode; set curtains (Ibi- ateni bedstea ; cut crystal sugar basin} silver sugar longs; silver ten spoons; tea shell (silver); mahogany knifia case; we mathematical instruments; mahogany tabla (2 leaves); chairs (common and stuffed bottoms); hair maul”? straw do.; French bedstead, pailasse for do. ; dingo; table, with extra leaf; kitchen tables; mahogany agno- ble desk; bridle, 61.0. i, ‘ A quantity ofBOOKS, Violin, &c. with homo: other valuable articles. :- Nov. 20ili,1840. ‘ - ’ CARD. ' H. TAYLOR invites persons from the I o Colonies, visiting London, to ins eat his man chinery, now in uperalion,for cutting woo into slaves, lailis, shingles, die. By this invention, for which Pl- lenls for Great Britain and her Colonies have been obtained, a very aim is machine, with two horse power, can .cut upwards 0 two hundred slaves or shingles in a minute, all, whether the feathered shingles or straigh, staves, as smooth as ifpliined or drawn, and without loss Those who have seen the machinery, admit that it is at once simple and efficaci- ous, and likely to snpersede in a great measure the present mode of manufacturing those articles. Mr. Taylor's object is to sell his patent for the various Colo- nies or grant licences for iis use, and lie earnestly solicits those who are concerned in the wood trade, to call and satisfy themselves at the Square Shot Towor, Surreysido of Waterloo Bridge. London, November 5. MWEQQ VEGETABLE LIFE MEDICINES. HESE Medicines are indebted for their name to their manifest arid sensible action in puri- fying the springs and channels oflife, and enduing them with renewed tone and vigor. In many hundred cer- tified cases which have been made public, and in almost every species of disease to which the human frame is liable, the happy effects of Moifat‘s Lifo Pills and Phenix Bitters have been gratefully and publicly acknowledged by all persons benefited, and who were previousl unacquainted with the beautifully hilosophical primi- ples upon which they are compoun ed, and upon which thgy onsequently nct. ' he Life Medicines recommend tliemselvesin diseases of every Rum and description. The first operation is to lIoosen from the coats of the stomach and bowel: the various imcpuriiies and crudities constantly settlin around them 3 and to remove the hardened feces whic collect in the convolutions of the small intestines. ,Othcr medicines only partially cleanse these, and leave such collected masses behind as to produce habitual costive- ness, with all its train of evils, or sudden diarrhoea, with its imminent dangers. This fact is well known to all regular anatomists, who examine the human bowels after death: and hence the prejudice of these well in- formed men against quack medicines—or medicine- pre- pared and heralded to the public by igiionint persons. The second effect of the Life Medicines is to cleanse the kidneys and the bladder, and by this means, the liver and the lungs, the healthful action ofwhich entirely depends upon the regularity ofilie urinary organs. The blood, which takes its red colour from the agency of the liver and the lungs, before it passes into the heart, being thus purified by them, and nourished by food coming from a clean stomach, courses freely through the veins, renews every part of, the system, and triumphantly mounts the banner ofhealih in the blooming cheek. Mofi'at's Vegetable Life Medicines have been tho- roughly tested, and pronounced a sovereign remedy for Dyspepsia, Flatulency, Palpitation of the Heart, Loss of Appetite, Heartburn nnd Headache, Resiless‘heu, Ill- iemper, Anxiety, Langour and Melancholy, Costiveneu, Dion 3, Cholera, Fevers of all kinds, Rheumatism, Gout, i-opsies of all kinds, Gravel, Worms, Asthma and Consumption, Scum/y, Ulcers, lnveterate Sores, Scorbuiic IEru tions and Bad Complexionl, Eruptivo complaints, sa low, cloudy and other disagreeable com- plexmns, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, common COM! and nfluenra, and various other complaints which afilm the human frame. In Fever and Ague, articulunl , the Life Medicines have been most eminent ysucceIéI—so much so, that in the Fever and Ague Districts, lay-ici- ans almost universally prescribe them. All that Mr. Mofi'at requires of his patients ii, to be particular in taking the Life Medicinesstrictly according to the directions. It is not by a Newspaper notice, or by any thing that he himself may say in their favor, that he hopes to gain credit. It is alone by the results of I fair trial. ‘ J. B. coorrh a; Co. Sale A smfar Prince Edward bland. Charlottetown, July , 1840. British and North American ROYAL MAIL ,STEAM sums, of 1200 Tan: burthen and 440 Horse Power such. Under Contract with the “,Lords of the Admifllty." FOR BOSTON, CARRYING HER MAJEer’s MAiLs, AND meniscus 'ro hALiFAx. _.. 'A_ rm) Aux}. Bni'rANNiA, Captain HENRY Woonnm; ACADiA, do. ROBERT Mitten; CALEDONIA, do. RICHARD CLELAND. COLUMBIA, do. WALTER Donous. THE ACADiA will leave Boston on Tuesday the lst, and Halifax on Wednesday the 3d ofBop- tember, for Liverpool, G. B. . a; The above Vessels will be despatched from Live?- pool as follows :—-July 4th, August 4th, September 4th and 19m, October 4th and 19m, November 4th, Decem- bei= 4th. And will leave Boston, callin at Halifax from whence the vessels will sail on the August,“ September, 3d and 18th October, 3d November, and 3d December—1840. Passage—including Provisions, Wino anal-Steward's fee—to Halifax, 35 guineas; to. Boston, 39 ninoIal From Boston and Halifax to Liver 001, 125 dol an} 1‘" eluding Steward’s feo. From alifax to Boston,” dollars. For ass: a a l to P g’ P” s,CUNAnD to». Halifax, August 19, 1840.. ' racket between Georgetown and Pi THE Packet Schooner R will leave Georftown for Pictnu,oa , od- nesday in each wee durin the'lsuonfilnlnb diaiely afler the arrival of the Mail rein Charlottetown, and will leave Pictou, on itsreturn to Gear town on the following Monday, after the arrival of Mull fi'olu Halifax. , , ‘ 1 . cum. Cabin Passengers, 1:. 6d. each. Steerage do. 5:. . I Children above three years, and under H m of age—half price. Children under 3 years Goods or the rate of 9d as! bulk, Horses-nil Csttls, 1s. . such. “I, 33th, 1800. . v . p. 4 ' " ' :dzqu