E i E 5 r prinoi , d ill of town» 1‘ suisisii ti."'ii""'u:«'—Ti';r(ri: w e : huoirbefsrethellouseofcolln on ,gives to Cenedetoa rthe I30 r of mem- in sdeh manner as to fig. news A ‘the se rate dissblution Leglsrtive Council and u 5:3,!!! i r . The billalso empow- o Canada by any set reser- ' ty to vary the s of the Legis- Govern- 9'1l5i :3: er‘ in Quads worth A. of 1840 is to be repealed as &(hnadien Legislature frpplil presqnt- la)es' ‘ ensnt an ' to a ter ‘tl?e.IA ' tive, nnoil” "- the second en third rndingnhcecrori 0 0 III‘ and die Assembly; end the clause is also to Ice that, in cases abet- aud Crown rights, any bill Iaflys assent must be laid to address be.-.“’te.:dft-:0‘ ‘the » ea preeen is ei r Hone, praying her llqlesty to withhold her 0ssr’s Bsvouvss.-—A recent number of Dick- Wovds ouihins a graphic ao- Oolonel CoIt's invention of the revolv- dchlling circumstances which % m’s coast of e other, the powder is the without being measured; for in Is to put in too much powder, if eno left for the bell. Six balls in the hand, and also placed, one other, in the holes. These balls are shape, like those for the Minis rifle, fix on a barrel, bein bron ht down by on the lever principle, orces all the rapid suocemion, into the holes. The being nowtpecrfectly air-tight, requires At beckof ' cylinder are , caret‘ y se- otbsr; an the marksman, in his hand, uts on one of , ‘oh the six- loaded. caps being at the back hp qglinder, will not fall ng: end, bo char and caps ' t, experiments eve proved after some hours’ immersion The top of the hammer itself, in a little spike on the end of the barrel, Exes the sight for aiming. On pulling back heuimsr with the thumb. after firing, the cylinder revolves one-sixth of in circumference, 55%‘ E! éfgé z 3-: in water. riled, and the char none of the force of the powder is lost; the balls are carri further, and with far predsion tbn from an ordinary mus- I Coal has been discovered in t abundance [met under Evansville, Ind tis proposed to tune! the city, in order to get attliemine. The Albany Register’ se : The new York express train drawn by tIIO"llOWr;I:flllo Cltidell, srtinitewiroesossneiitsu ,ren from Syrecine to Rochester e dishnce of sigh -one miles, in rlirldy-ss'.r minutes, on Friday. '1‘ is is ,running on record for so greets The crop of cherries is said to be short about :13 New Jersey. If all are as dekly as those haw ed about the sheemtlieshoreer the eroptliebetter forthe public health. Illinois, has a farm often acres, and has upon it, this year, 2,- which will robe ly ield Dtmbushele. The corn ed tocet sis out up, and ' to tbein, and Browns farm, six four broad. He paid. last year, Besides these huh:-‘acts of unimprovedflliddo: l1ranncsr.—As the steamer ;exteu ed they were both unfortunately an-rs.—-It may not be am- haewu he some is an excellent - ..,....-'-1- -.:-s --....=--::'.s..~.:°-::'.:=-.2 es‘. of lime. withontl did- snsl. «pg. l'pshsss"istbenaiuegivestos .1’-é"-“m"""'°“°" l ~ to v _Q re bein P°ty- eetin « hke out , ient fad , and ‘ to England, -it-«I4-. ' was! l. 3l'...‘.'2"" "‘ Iain 3.! any disorder of HASZARITS GAZETTE, JULY 26. The Earl qfdldborougli and Holloway’; Pills,- An astounding core by this rnirscu ous medicine seer means lied failed. seesxtrsot ,s letter,‘-,Isted *- Villtltuins, r 9‘! ‘[845. To Ptofisser _. to acquaint you Iliut em.-cted a care of s, dieoiddr in mach, which all the reset eniisent liy home said all over the _,Contniest ' y, . not even the waters of Carlsbad or Msrienbad. (Signed) These wonderful Pills will cure the1lver end eioinseh. : M.» d as one-an-s~ - do in ii 'I"1'hl;. Wednesday,‘ July 26. IBM. , ‘ma itssroiisn ivuoisriuras. Tux best possible answer that could have_been given to t c’ misre resentations—the iiiildest term we can use—o Mr. Whelan in the Emmi‘- rier, re cting the facts and motives which led to the restoration of the names of those gentlemen, to the commission ,who. in Nov.last, from a prin- ciple ofdu ,conceived themselves opmpellcd to tender their resi nations as Justices of the Peace, to the L. ov., is the_ publication of the )- whole correspondence relative to the subject. From this it is evident that these gentlemen have been actuated by the some sense of duty in eccedin to the wishes of a number of their (‘ fellow subjects,“ dictated their resignations: and the Licut. Governor has, it appears, with great delioacy,left their own option, the course they might think proper to adopt.- Tbey have chosen wisely, and instead of incur- ring an isgrace from the mode of conduct they have pursued, they have, on the contrary, acquired additional respect, and enhanced esteem with all who know them, and will, we trust, long continue to exercise the duties of their important stations, with the some discre- tion, firmness, and judgment which they have hitherto displayed. Since writing the above. we have seen Mr. Wbelan’s remarks in the Eromirier. on the cor- res ndence above alluded to, and all we have to (gene is, that we think it would have been better taste in Mr. Whelan to have kept silent on the subject. People have long since made up their minds u n the matter, and all that can be ublisbe , will do nothing towards altering e determination already formed. It is with feelings of no ordinary satisfac- tion that we announce the sppointmentof John ‘N Hcnsel , . A.B. as Professor of Mathematics d at Phil an osophy, in King's College, Windsor. Mr. Hensley, though note natural born, isen ado ted son of Prince Edward Island, and whet is o the most impormnce, has been educated here, so that the Island has a right to claim the honor which has accrued to her from the elevation of one of her children in the hi her ranks of Literature. While we congret are Mr. Hensley, his relatives, pre- ceptors, and friends u ii his success, we trust that his example willo prove an incentive to others, to work their way through the arduous, and at times, it must be confessed, toilsome paths of learning, and still to persevere,though they feel pain by reason of the ru dness of the road, and severi of the ascent, for, let them be assured that t ey will in the end, be well repaid for all they may have suflei-ed, or be com to endure while in the pursuit. We trust likewise, that it will not be without its etfeot upon our Legiiaslsture ; for, though_ we have, and ever will , advocates of tIl0.dlEI.l- sion of sound knowledge, by every practicable means, through the mass of the community, and would grudge nothing of _a cuniary nature, to have an object so desirab e carried out on the broadest scalc,_we cannot shut our cyes—nor have we an wish to do so-—to the necessit there exists in every well regulated state, 0 the means of efordin to those who ma desire it, a complete e ucatio_ii in the big or branches of Literature and Science. If .we are able to vern ourselves, we ought also to be able to ucate ourselves, so as to render us more capable of Self Government. In fact, the ‘ institution of adequate Seminaries of learnin , ought naturally to have preceded that of Se f Government; as it is, however, we trust that the time is not for distant, when the Central Academy will be devoted to the purpose of im- partin a higher de es of know edge than it is poseib c it can aflor under its sent system of government. Not that the stitution, im- perfect as it is, has not been of signal service to the youth of the Island, and e t blessing to the community in general. imess the number of School Masters that have been trained under its ans ices, to the t credit of the Masters. till, it must bacon- fcsscd, that it is an thing but Ilatscring to the Island, that it shou d form the only exception emi the surrounding Colonies and a ' cent States, of a Country worthy of having a sepa- rate Government, that has not a ollcge at which her sons may not be qualified to compete with streners in the higher branches ofleerning. of Mass. was no see of one half of the advantages and faci ities for endow- ing a University at the time Herve College was founded, as Prince Edward Island is now ; and the Revenue of Nova Scotia was not near as great, though the oorrespondin demands u n it were far greater than that o the Island w on King’s Oolle was instituted. We trust that the cause of earning will find a tron and advocate in our pgesent Licnt. Governor. No man can know tter than he does, how necessary, how indispensubly necessary it is to efiird the means and opportunity of acquiring a general, and at tb ' educa- E e seuie time sound tion, to the ambitious and espirmg youth of a rising Colony like ' . We ineke no epoloy to Mr. John Hensley for this public use of his name, for be has now bscomea public charac- ter, and as such, of our roperty. We rqjoloe in his elevation, but wi be far better eased to listeu—i it be pcrmittsd—to his l"u.--n speech as President, at the com- neaiuretlon of the lsstltsllss of the University st lstletsvs. ‘R0150 Rsrxiane: the _hIosasc and the GEOLO- ices. A Lecture delivered before the Young lens’ Christian Association, In Exeter llull. ._ ‘London, by Hooii Mii.i.n,eutbcr of the “ Old | Se dstone," “Footprints of the Crcu- 4 tor," “ First Impressions of England and its Poo l ," &.c., tl'co., price 25 cents. Boston: Gou d and Lincoln. Charlottetown: George T. (Concluded) .) The following passage is very graphically written :— _ _ One of, perhaps, the most deeply interesting departments of our grenl. British Mussum—the wonder of the world—'is that noble gallery. consisting of a suite of rooms, opening in line, the one beyond the other, which forms its rich store-house of organic retnsine. You must, of course, remember the order in which the or iinisins of that gallery are ranged. The visitor is ret ushe into a spacious room devoted to fossil plnnts, chiefly oflhe Coal Measures. And if these organisms are in any degree lees iiiipos- ingiii their aspect than those of the apartments Wlllcll follow in the series, it is only because that, from the exceeding greatness of the Coal-Measure plants, they can be exhibited in but hits and frag- ments. Wilhin less than an hour's walk of the Scottish cspitalthere are single trees of this ancient period deepl embedded in the sandstone strnts,l which. though existing as mere mutilated portions of l their former selves, would yet fail to find llC('.0IllIIIO- ' dalion in that great apartment. One of these I'uss_il I known as the Grtinton quarry, is ii mere fragment, for it wants both root and top_ pod yet what remains is sixty-one feet in length, by six feet in dinincter; ! and beside it lherelies ii sinnllcr uraucarian, nlsoi mutilated, for it wants top and branches, und it; measures seventy feet in length, by four feet in j diameter. Issw lately, in a quarry of the Coull Measures, about two miles from my dwelling-house, ! near Edinburgb,Ibe stem of a plant ullied to tho; club-niossss of our moors, considerably thicker than the body ofn man. and which, reckon- ing on the ordinary proportions oflhe plant, iiiusi have been at least seventy feet in height. And 0 a kiml of aquatic reed, that more resembles the dimi- nutive msre’s tail of our marshes tliitn riught else that now lives, remains have been found in abundance in the same coal-field, more than ti foot in diuinclcr, by thirty feet in length. Imposing, then, as arc the vegetable remains of this portion of the national r l museum, they would be greatly more imposing still, did they more adequately re resent the gigantic flora of the remote age to which I ey belong. Passing onwards in the gallery, from the great | plants of the Pslirozoic division to the animals of the i Secondary one, the attention is at once arrested by the inonsirous forms on the wall. Shapes ilint riiore than rival in strangeness the great dragons, and grif- fins, and "luithly worms,” ofinedin-vnl legend, or, according to Milton, the “ gorgons, liydras, and old- merns dire,” of classical fublo, frown on the passing l visitor; and though wrapped up in their dead and stony slee ofsgss, seem not only ilie most strange, L but also 1 s most terrible things on which his eye; ever rested. Enormous jaws, bristling with pointed 1 teeth, gape horrid in the stone, under staring e 1 socltetsa full foot in diameter. Necks that hslfequal , in length the entire body of the boa-constrictor. stretch ‘ out from bodies mounted on line like those ofa fish, and furnished with little somewhat resembling those of the mammals. Here we see a winged dr on that | armed with sharp teeth and strong claws, ind cu-l reared through the air on Ieathern wings like those of‘ a but; there an enormous crocodiliiin-whale, lhat,, mounted on many-jointed paddles, had traversed in quest of prey, the green depths oflhe sea; yonder an herbivorous lizard, with a horn like that of II rhino- ccros projecting from its snout, and that, when it browsed amid the dunk meadows of the Wsnlden, must have stood about twelve feet high. All is enor- mous, monstrous, vast, amid the creeping and flying things, and the great sea-monsters of this division of the gallery. ‘ e pass on into the third and lower division, and . sn eulirel aitfererti class of exiiitonces new catch the e e. Who ha is mastodon, with his enormous of body, and his Iusks projecting from both ‘< G e lengt e- =' O our-s giant skeleton. We see beside him the great bones of the niegstheriurn,—thigh bones eleven inches in diameter, and claw-armed toes riiore than two feet in length. There, too, ranged species be- yond species, are the extinct elephants; and there the pondcrous skull of the dinothsrinrn, with the bent tucks in its lower jaw, that give to it the appearance of a great picksxe, and that must have dug deeply of old amid the lilisceous roots and bulbs of the Tertiary lakes and rivers. There, also, are the msuive heads and spreading horn-cores of the Bat primigeriius, and the large house and broad, plank-like horns of the great Irish elk. And there, too, in the same apartment, but leaning against its further wull—lust, as most recent, of all the objects of wonder in that great gollery—is the fsinous human skeleton of Gun- daloupe, standing out in bold relief front its slab of grey limestone. It occurs in the series, just as the series closes, a little beyond the mastodon, and the mammolhs; and in its strange character, as a fossil- msn, attracts the attention scarce less powerfully than the great Palsroxoic plants, the great Secondary re tiles. or the sat Tertiary mammals. last passed i rough this woundrous gallery at the time when the attraction of the Great Exhibition bed filled London with curious visitors from all parts c the empire; and a group of intelligent mechanics, fresh from some manufacturing town of the Midland Counties, were ssunisring on through its chambers, immedistel before me. They ood amazed be- neath the dragons of the Ooliis and Lies; and with more then the admiration and wonder of the disciples of old when contemplating the huge stones of the Temple, they turned to say, in almost the old words, "Lo. master, what manner of great beasts are these?” "These sre,"I replied, “the soa-mon- stars and creeping things ofths second great period of organic existence." The reply seemed satisfactory, and we passed on together to tliq terminal apartments of the range appropriated to the Tertiary organisms. And there, before the enormous mammals, the mecha- nics sgsin stood in wonder. and turned to inquire. Aniici sling the query, I said, " And these huge sets of the earth. and the cattle of the third great period of organic existence; and yonder, in the apartment, you see. but at its further end, is the famous fossil-man Guadeloupe, locked up by the pelrifective agencies in a slab of limestone." The mechanics sgsin seem eat’ And, of course, had I encountered them in the tint chamber of the t I would‘hsve them that the were the remains of the herbs trees 0 t rel greet period of organic exis- tence. But in the c in o the inemmsls we parted. and I saw them no more." acne: easily be supposed the vordslnthe trecs—ii noble arnucurian—wliicli occurs in what is d ,lorins of vitality, and from thence to the higher. upper and under jaw, stands erect in the middle of h r I gpglaudetl, second chap. of Genesis, v. ‘Zand 3. *' And on the seventh day God umlod his work which he had made ; mid lie rested on the serentli day from all his work which ho had made. And G blessed the sevenili day and suiiciificd it: be- cause that in it lit.‘ lmd rested from all his work which (lod created and made." is a great 0 G- obstiicle with those Wll0 insist upon taking the J words of Moses in their literal sense; our author gives the following view of his ideas of this nice but important subject :— Sucli are a few of the g iologicel facts which lend me to believe that the days In ilie Mosaic nocount were great periods. not natural days; and be it re- membered, that between the sclicnis tif lengthened eriods and the scheme of a merely local clirtos, which existed, no one knows how, and ofn merely local creation, which had its scene, no one knows J h where, geological science leaves us now no choice w ittever. It has been urged, however, that this scheme of periods is irreconcilable with Hill! Divine “ reason" for the institution of the Sabbath which he who appointed the day of old, has. in his goodness vouclisafcd to in I have failed to see any force in the objection. God, the Creator, who wrought during six periods, re.-led during the seventh period; and us we have no evidence whatever that he recmii- menced his work of crcation—ns, on the contrary, man seems to be the last formed of crealures—God may be rt-sling still. The presumption is strong that 'x- Salilmlli is an extended peri , not a natural (la und that the work of Redemption is his Sabbath uy‘s work. ml so I cannot see that it in the least interferes with the integrity of the reason rendered, to read it us follows :—Work during six periods, and rest on the sevciilli ; for in six periods the Lord cre- nlcd llie licav-eiis und the earth, and on the seventh period he rtstusd. The Divine periods may have liceii wry great, the lllllllllll periods very siiinll;just us a vast coiiliiiciil or the huge enrtli itself is very grout, and n map or geographical globe very small; but if, in the nmp or globe, the proportions be faith- fully msinisinud, lllltl the scale, though a minute one, be true in I its parts and applications, we nounco the map or globe. notwithstanding the small- ness of its size, n fnitli a copy. Were man's Sab- butlis to be kept as isnjoiiicd, und in the Divine pro- portions, it would scarcely interfere with the logic of the " reason annert-d to the lourili coinmaiidment," though in this imiilor, as in all others in which man can lie on imimtor of God, the imitation should be a miniature onc. 'l‘he work of llcdemplion may, I repeat, be the work of God's Sabbath day. What, I ask, viewed as a whole, is the prominent characteristic of geologic history, or ofllini corresponding history of creation, which forms the grandly-fashioned vestibule of the sacred volume? U1" bolli alike the lending clniracisiisiic is progress. In both rtlike do we find an upward progress from dead matter to the hunibler And after great cziltlc und beasts of the earth had, in due order, succeeded inanimate plants, sea-inonslent, and moving creatures that had life, the moral agent, mun, enters upon the scene. Previous to his appear- ance on earth, ouch succeeding elevation in the Ion upward march had been is result of creation. 'l‘lie creative list went forth, and dead matter came into existence. The crealive fie! went forth, and plants, with the lower nniinul forms. came into existence. 'l‘lie creative (in! went forth, and the ovipnrous unimals—birds and reptiles, came into existence. The creative lint went forth, and the nisirimifsrous uniinals——cniile und beasts of the earth, came into existence. And, finally, last in the series, the cron- tive lint went forth, and responsible, immortal man, came into existence. Bot has the course of progress come, in consequence, to at close.’ work of elevnling, ruining. lieiglilcniiig—of making the high in due progression succeed the low-—sii|ll oes on. But man's responsibility, liis immortality, his God-implnnicd lmuincls respecting an eternal future, forbid that thin work of elevation and pr ess s ould be‘, as in all the other instances, a war of creation. To create would be to an reeds. God's work of elevation now is the work c filling and re- aring peccable. imperfect man, for u ecl, impeccable, future state. God's seventh day's work is the work of Redemption. And. read in this light, is reason vouchssfed to man for the institution of the Sabbath is found to yield a meaning of peculiar breadth and emphasis. God, it seems to say, rests on his Sabbath from his creative labors, in order that by his Sabbath-dny‘s work he may save and elevate you; rest yo also on your Sribbaths, that through our cooperation with iin in this great work ye may be elevated and saved. Made originally in the image of God, let God be your pattern and example. Engaged in your material and tem oral eriiployinenls, labor in the proportions in which a labored; but in order that you may enjoy an eternal future with him, rest also in the proportions in which he roots. The above extracts will enable our readers to form a ood idea of the manner in which lr. Miller ias treated his subject, and will give them also a specimen of his style of writin . We have no hesitation in recommending this cheap little work to the same favorable con- sidcrntion of the public here, that it has ob- tained elsewhere, that is, wherever it has been published. We trust it may have the cfect also of introducing a taste for others of the author's oductions, which have been highly and eagerly read, both in Europe America To THE Eniron or Haszanife Gas:-rru. in ; Various false and absurd statements having been published in the Anvuirrrisit and Exassiitszu, Newspapers, relative to the recent restoration to the Commission of the Peace for Queen's County, of the eleven Gentlemen who thought proper to retire there- from in the month of November last, we beg to request that you will give publicity, in your next issue, to the accompanying Correspondence, which embodies the uvholefactr of (Its case. We are, &c. , (Signed on behalf of the Msmorislisls), JAMES PEAKE. To His Excellency Dosnircx DALY, Esqurua, Lieutenant Gorsrrior, dc, Qt‘. Q0. The humble Memorial of the undersigned Inhabitants of Charlottetown and Royalty, respectfully sheweth—- That your Memorislists labour under serious in- couveniencs—amouulin at times to a denial of jus- tioe—in consequence 0 [he resignation _and retire- M 't th f . l .. ..';‘.i..'..’. u.°.'h‘1'.°a..l’..'.'.".«l..'2.'.siL.'fi other steps in the premises as will remed the "51 . complained of; and as in duty bound. youi ' ists will ever pray. ' ‘ James Peskc.( William Hicks , Daniel Bvensu, Willlsrn Cross 3, since Duiiosu, William I. Davldfi, snies D. Mason. J. I. Bourke, . Henry Palmer, J Mgflgin, -lllmfl "Idle. James H. Bourke. Robert Longworth, Simon Dodd; Om“ M0070. James McKenns, John Bovyer. Richard Lockhert, James Anderson, N icholss Harris, J hn C. McDonald, Themes Dawson J I". S. Iiugrisll, W. H. Gardiner, 0 S. Breniner, Gorge W. G Charles Mt-.Nutt, James llvsvie. Kenneth Mclienzis, Jeustlian Coll _ J. W. Morrison, John Jury, Jun , J. B. Cooper, Js I , 'I‘. Hcsih Hsviland. William Lowe, . wson John C. Biuns, J '1‘. 'l‘homss. John I.ePsge, B. Dawson, ohu Currie, John Gales, Micheal O'Hara, lin Yeo, G rgs G ta, William Hodgsoii, George Wr' ht, George Moore , otnss W. , s ' Alfred LeI’sgs, Bertram Moore, junin , William Heard, G T. Hshldy, . John khsrt, James Walls, Junr., J . B Pollard, James Waits, Senr., George Head Charles Saunders, A F Nelson, Thomas Pleiidwell, George Snelgrove, David Stewart, William Johnson, Rllpll '1' lllllll loll. Themes Williams, Joseph Crsbh, yo, harles Hssrtz, James Paablas, John Pliuipton, William McKay, Mark Butcher, E. L. Ltydiavd, George Beer, Jun.. James tetiley, John l"!'v Jsuiis Gillespie, Samuel Westscolt, Richard Wright, II. A. Johnson William Bsrnstaed, Clirislopher Cross, William Edwards, Ollll Kill”. John Stor , Albert Ilinde Yates, William odd, Henry J. Citlbsck, James Barret. Neil Rankin, Hugh Perkin, John Arhucltle, Donald Nicholson, George A. Thresher, John Beadle. George W. Milner, Clisrlotieiown, June 26th, I834. Gentlemen; We beg leave respectfully to acquaint you that we have this day addressed a Memorial to His Excal- lency Dominick Duly, Esquire, requutiug that he will be pleased to reinstate you in the Commission of the Peace for Queen's County; and we sincerely lrnst that no considerations of a merely private or personal nature will induce you to & gid appointments, should His Excellency see fit to cause the same to he made e are, Gentlemen. ost obedient Servants, [Hers follow I04 Signatures, as above.] To the Honorsblas, J. Hall, D. McDonald. and H. Gray, S.Nelsou. T. B. Trsnisin, R. Hutehie. son, J. D. Hsszsrd; John Morris, Charles Hsaaud, 'I‘heo. Desbrissy, and John Lyell, I-Zsquires. Charlottetown, 29th June, I354. Gentlemen; We acknowledge. with feelings of much gratifica- tion, your C0lIIlI’IIl|.ll0n of the Twenty-sixth June, slant. The subject matter contained therein shall receive our best consideration, and, whatever corneas" mg individually be led to adopt, you may that we shall be actuated b a desire to promote the welfare of yourselves and ed the community at large. We have the honor to be, Gentlemen J. Hamilton Gray, Thsophilas Desbrisy. guise Hsnardr . e Charles Ilesuard. To James Peeks, Esq. and others. Charlottetown, July 6, 18“. Gentlemen; We have the honor to acknowledge receipt of your letter or the 29th tilt. ; and we have new the pleasure to trsnemit,for your information gs‘ , e co y of a letter this day received from the Honorable olonisl Secretary, in reply to our Memorial to Iih Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, dated the Hill day of June last. We are, Gentlemen, Your obedient Bervsats, (Signed on behalf of the Meuiorislists,) ('5 To the Honorsblss J. M. McDonald; '1‘. 3. main, 8. Hate seen, 0. Nelson, J. Morris, T. Deebriey, J. D. Hesurd. C. Hsssard and J. Ly ll. Esqsires. (Enclosure rqbrred to in the about cousiusicetioe.) ecretsry’s Oflce, July 0, IBM. tlemeu; I am directed by h'is lxcellanc the Lleetsese Governor to acquaint you that the euicriel respect- ing ihe resignation of eleven Justices of the Peace. add to him on the 26th of last month. and signed by yourself, and one hundred and three , has had is serious consideration , sad that lie is now ready to restore l demos to their formerpe- since in the Commise n of the Peace for Queen's County, provided they are disposed to accede to your wishes. I have the honor to be, Your most obediest servant. (Signed) FRANCIS IDNGWOBTII, Celoalal fleet-awry James Peaks, Esquire, and other nieraorielisl, Charlottetown. Charlottetown, July 1, ll“. Gentlemen; Your communication g merit from otiice, about seven months since, of no less than eleven of our most active and etlicient Magistrates, whose places have hitherto been but sedy; ml -ltl-cl-sh we I very partially and inadequately supplied by sslise- MI lllto Illdfif I Nellie insets. Ilr Alesasdev Isassrnss QIOIC Offlll flattering sense of the high atiisietiel In ich '. formerly stood this community, as e | on eenetreleetl, is as... It‘ lasalt. shred to u by i ll bk replt It I