= aes * i alae I cen ~ cea € THE EXAMINER. PWR eter a ait. eer, ee ed - —_— -- alt wotius'va with a Me, Hog lsoa, of the same place, a druggist.! the wso of the Holy Scriptures was on the inerease. The To disguise che Knavery, the two tradesmen, in their doaltugs, public returns on this head sewed some extraordinary and called the plaster ‘dal? get ulili’ aud the confeetioner’s. anomalous tacts, that whilst the Scriptures were peglected in| unger. went to the druguist’s shep for che invicrial thus’ some sehoels consisting sulely of Mretcstants, there were oman Catholig masters and pupils who made use of them ; | designated. A raw apprentice, iv the service of the diag sist, unaeuainted with the pass-word, went up stairs to his muster, but this, above all things, was manifest, and was, to every who was tll ti b al, to ask tor instructions, und was told to true lover of his fellow luna, a cheering aud agreeable fret, , proce do ty the cellar for J2 pounds of *dalt, ta a corner of that Protestants and Catholics, under this sysiem, lived in| which he would find a cask coutaning the material, iu the wubroken harmony, so far at least concurring in one Serip- cellar he found two easks, one containing + daft,’ the other; tural doctrine, and so far interpreting alike the precepts ct cscute, aud the boy svevel Neale with arscui¢ instead of) their commen Suviour. Things were in this state till, in an} Vlaistor of Vavis. A retail dealer, name l Hiudaker, bought, evi! hour, the Jate School Visiter, Mr. Stark, being called on, w quantity of this abominable nuxture, sold the lozenges in| oa the oecasion of the inauguration of the Normal School, to ie oberket-place of Bradtord, aud the result was the fearful | describe what is cailed the Stowe System of Education, spoke vid wholesale poisoning we have meutionel, Glaring, rank , of religious iastruction as a thing inseparable from the daily | dishonesty has beew the cause of the calamity-—ithe determi-' teaching thereia—overlooking, by design or veyligence, or nation of Neale to undersell his honest competitors. Neale! through ignorance, the fact that the schools frum wheaee he und Tlodygsouw have been indicted for manslaughter, Tee) derived his experieuce ware only attended by Protestant | Mnglish papers speak iw the severest terms respecting the scholars. Had he had sullicient honest y or sufficient tutelli- practice of adalrerating food, and recommend that the Goveru- gence to have looked to Lreland, w ere, as here, suhools were tient will adupt measures, however extreme, for eradicating | instituted for the wants of am xed Lonan Catholie and, the evil. Protestant population, he might have secu the matter in a 7 | cm |): : ot ah a = | different, and its trae light. [tr appears that the Roman | Ge hj ¢ Vrx (i 11 1 4 ¢ r | Catholic Bishop, hearing this, supposed that Mr. Stark’s state | ’ ‘iment could not be, as it really was, wholly unauthorised, and | wai =-© | was induced—which is ever to be regretted—to write a kim That body, in reply, | wee assured his Lordship that no departure trem the system so/ INFORMATION FOR THE PEOPLE, _ | long happily pursued would take place, which was alike an. ill uuswer to the fears expresse! aud to some suggestions which REVIEW OF THE ACTS AND MEASURES OF THE) they did not entertain, Nothing was done whatever in con iBERAL GOVERNMENE OF PRINCE EDWARD Is-— sequence of this correspondence, if the exchange of one } CHARLOTTETOWN, PELE, DECEMBER 13, 1858. of protest to the Board of Education. ee eee ere ere setter | could be so called—and it was treated by the desiguing and wnalicious as if it was a lengihoned affvir—except that it We know that a delusion has been very industriously and jelicived from the Board of Kducation, sanctioned by the| disionestly circulated, in order to counteract this moasure of | Liberal Government, a declarat‘on that no alteration would | relict, respecting the Gauncial affiirs of the Colony. When | 2 sanctioned in a system which, up to that time, had heen in: we cone to that how we shall show to demonsteation their | S&°h harmonious practice. The Government and both Houses : : sf : v see oe i 2 ad i ies ° ¢ : stele wickedness and, falechood: but here for a moment let us| ° Legislature viewed these things in the same light, notwith- | digress, to show the dep injustice thit is done Sir Dominick | Standing the eager opposition of many parties in the House . . ° ‘ . o F qe } , *} . t) . rPare : >» ; 70 . 2tiona j Daly by chargiag him with misrepresenting the Island's re- | °' Assembly, who bad ur : FORM, when eer sanetioned | ‘the same coustruction of the Education Bill; and the ilvuses sources. Our readers sisal! see, when we come to treat of | , > thetn, how atterly base are such accusations. It may bo; | C#pre-ed themselves: ia such accordasce In answer to the however, remarked, that all that the Hom2 Goverament had | ¢*'chslvely received petitions which, with numerous signa- | to do with the matter was to be sure they run no risk in| (res, Were laid before them. From that time to this, in) yiving & guarantee for the re-payment of £100,000, should | sete of clamour, in spite of fulsehood and misrepresentation, | we -borrow so much; bat the sum this Government might | Ess lave 0 ve uained —that is, in ty wtate Gey have beea borrow would depend oa how much liad was in the market.) '" for the last twenty years, or ever since there Was any prbiie Nor would the question be affected by the state of our fia inces. | education——wit! the exception that ere tecunicel diffi -ultics | as regards the wisdom of our laying out the money, because | have boca solved; and it-is.s remarkalid Tact, that during al! euch a measure would sustain its owa charges, But what (© exaggerated quarrel, only one appeal or dispute was over ! (Continued fran our last No ) i ; Sag Ie Se a ee -€ aommeeae a > PAAR MS EET ATC OS in the bush —who had never an aspiration house or the cabbler’s atall— might be exeused for making iu foot of himsel!, and at the same time consulting his pocket, while fe bad vanity enough to think that he was making a show of his independence by attending political meetings, the - ee . . spew be > object and elect of which he could not understand. But better things are expected from a gentleman who sets himself} up for a member of Parliament. jle is supposed to know that there are always two parties in the State: those whe are with and those who are against the Government ;— and moreover, the furmer may, with every propriety, hold office, while the latter cannot with any decency do so: or, if the Government know its duty, ought not to be permitted to do so. Mr. Holm, /£ appears, however, has got to learn his A BC in x political knowledge ; and if the progress which he makes | during the next sitting of Parliament be proportionate to his past acquirements, his happy constituents will haye reason to be proud of him, We have expressed our surprise that Mr.{1idin, as an official, should kick up his heels against the Government of which he was so anxious to be a servant, and fret and whine, and get all his friends to fret and whine in concert with him, because he has been very properly turned about his business in disgrace , but we are still more surprised at the culpable forbearance of the Government in al owing him to remain a day in office after he made a fuol of himself at the Donnybrook Fair Meeting on the 25th August Jast. With respect to Mr. Holm’s removal from the office of Clerk to the Small Debt Commissioners, the resolution which was ‘offered as a salve to his wounded yanity in this instance, in- forms us that this momentous occurrence was ** an act of petty tyranny, unjust, unreasonable and unealled for, and sayours tuo wuch of the ‘irun rod aduinistration’ to be tolerated by an independent and intelligent people, without repudiation.”’ We beg pardon for placing the last word of the above fiere, sentence in italies ; the expletives in the first part, respecting the injustice and nnreasonableness of ** petty tyranny,’’ admi- rably illustrate the educational acquirements as well as the boasted intelligence of the indignant opponents of the Govern- ment até Do Sable. As to the ‘ independent”? part of the thing, the here of the meeting has finely shoyn fis devotion lto the “* lard of the lion heart and eagle eye,’’ whea he felt that he esu-d not afford to ‘throw up an office worth forty shillings a year before he commenced trying to turn ovt thuse | 3ut we have can possess any man, be he [sland Tory or absent Proprietor, to cause him to oppose this measure, would be, 4 we did not know their malice, past finding out; for if we had the gua- rantee, it would be usefa! in the hands of whatever admi-| : : 4 | Were guided by the desire of those bodies to leave such sub- | jeets to the local Trustees, as heretofore; provided thar uistration it might fall inte—it might be taken up or laid aside us Opnaruantty migat ofer—it would be a gud-send to any proprietor who wanted to sell, and a great benefit to the renantry. Justead, however, of the cireamstance being used | tor the benefit of the teusntry, it is employed to rally agin | j u proprietary party in the Island, Goat agenis’ may still | tiourish, whilst their employers and’ their tenants may still | be oppresse] and deluded: ‘There ecetain!y did exist till now | an implied anderstanding that such measures should have! their trial rather than an Hecheat. ‘There is, however, no! engagement of that nature; and _if there were, the Lome ; Cioverument, through Sir Kdward Bulwer Lytton, has been | the first to violate it, an lin every reasouable sense has set tree the Government and Legislature of this Islavd to act as) they may think expedient; notwithstanling which, many of the best friends of the people are sill of opinion that the Land Purehase Bil offered fewer d ficulties ta the process of | making tenants into frecholders than Escheat would supply, that beimz a meusure of less universal application. Uowever, ujou the principle of half a loaf being better than no brew, it now behoves the friends of the people to resort to the latier us the only means, except the maintaiaing the rghit to the} arrears of quit rents, now lef, We pass ou now to a measure which is not very ostrusive | on public notice, but which hes a certain real value. We! mean the exclusion from the Smail Debt Courts of cases for! recovery of rent. All jandlords have the power to distrain | or levy their reat by distroas and sale of a tenant's effects ! found on the premises. This of course remains fo then—it | is the common law of the Mmpire; but their being prohibited, | except iu eases where there is nothing to distrain on, from | carrying vexations suits into Small Debt Courts, is a great. hoon to the tesint, and shows that the Liberal party arc} ever mindfut of his interests; wor should it be forgotten, in| consetion vith this subject, that till the One-ninth Bill! passed, these suits woald all have bees brought for the | recovery of rents at the rate of Is. 61. fox every shilling | werting of liability. A Bll was likewise passe], enacting | that when land was taken by law for roads, the amount ot | rent payable theveon could no longer be claimed. And} ik ow'se another limiting the expenses of distraint, and giving | w remady where these are excessive, before two Justices of the Peaes, in place of the tedious, doubtful and eX hensive one of un action in the Supreme Court, tt fat 245 ant justly been ¢ plained that the manner summoning Jurors place! in the hands of a partizan Sheriff tae Hower of packing a Jury for almost any purpose. . This j ‘ { ‘ On benneks hefore the tdaee ut’ Mlathin th ae die ree, brought before the Board of Education; and that was by) whom he knew had the power to keep hin in. jsee the system, under which they have so long lived ia bro- | pactive in this wickedoess must answer before a higher tribunal ! public opinion. } pyaf he arts 2 sy “Ve . } } ‘ ; z f 7 es 1 : } > : > nate the purtjes, er even to call their yuics by their trae) that he presided at a meeting, assembled to sympathise with “wr jthe Teachers. Rowan Catholies against a Protestant Teacher, which was ' ° , ‘ - . i ¢ ' oy +} . ’w r ( . 1, » g S ° - “ the views of the Board, the Goverument amd the Legislature, | Tbe" few who assembled at the School house ou the Ist inst., in the fact; that they censure the Government for dis- | missing Mr. Tivlm from the office of Clerk to the Commission- Why, the Government had nothing whatever to do with seience, Now it will be clearly seen, from this statement, jt. [¢ is not its provinee to appoint Clerks tu the Small Debt no one was fureel to do anything contrary to his eun-! ers. lj . . . . ' that neither the Protestant nor Catholic population desire to | Courts, and of course it is not in its power to dismiss them ; \ yt 4 af Su a “J as s . therby juve and charity, disturbed, False representations and We, therefore, recommend the indignantof De Sable to direct q « the Je ‘ . Ale OS at : P a bigotte] appeals may be made to stir wy intolerance und’ their bluster against the Commissioners, whoever they be, for natred, bui it can never be said thet they had their origin in the act of ** petty tyranny’? which has so deeply mortified the hearts of the people. [ou whom then did they originate, their particular friend, Mr. Holm. ‘ by wh Sit sone} ¥ Yv a? SPHe 12° Thas ie - a. ee . or by whomts it sought that they shoa'd beperpetuated ? That yo so ppose we shall shortly hear of another * indignation | . 2 they are contrary tu t.e Divine precepts, ne ds no ordained clergyman to ineuleate—we all know it, Those who are, a ’ 7 - o missed from the Post Office there for hisopposition to the Go- than any one we can iustitute, besides that powerful one of vernment, & person named George Smith was appointed to But enough of this—we forbear to desig- | suceced him. The first thing we heard of this worthy was, /names--to do so wonld require s ronger language than we : aad . : a d require » ronzer language than We , yfy, Nisbett, and to express indignation against the Govern- intend toemploy. We had rather assuqd: tian irritate. Our } . re that Mr. Smith hast ae . ment. sow, we are gla ea nat Mr. 5 sit enee hakbeamving te ow, eg o learn r. Smith has been ject is nut to excite, but to tuform, quic the subject ef idueation, we eanuot hut remark on the ingratitude to the existing Government of very many of | Glasgow people will perform the old faree over with & new vase ing Year after-year they Qad reiterated a melan- | cast of parts—the unfortunate Mr. George Smith to be the chaly comp!ta‘ut of the inadequacy of their mexns of support. hero of the play. Who but the Lberal Government placed them in the mote| 7,046 ridiculous meetines in the country have. all tak easy cireamstan ces which they now enjoy? The return they | a ' — ra “or Oe or, ry have ail taken have made, not, indeed, without honorable exceptions, has been (their rise from that which was held in to ewploy the influence their better condition has given them | August last, and which proved to be such a melancholy failure against their best frieads and considerate benefactors, The } to the Opposition. Their promoters have entirely forgotten ’ ‘uarlottetown in ere . 430¢ ay ° lag Sut ye sel ‘ © : ; " . ° + - j oe al ayy ‘ 1 th y Have assiinca must ve a constant | the course pursued by the Tory Government in 1854, when i drawback to their usefulness. : mt ee ; ‘they turned out of office every Liberal they could lay their | (To be conc.uded in our next.) — a =e om * ANOTHER INDIGNATIOY MEETING, J ‘who never made himself obnoxious to any class of men in the ‘community. The Liberals never thought of calling indignation They considered that their oppo- We are requested to publish, as well as the other journalists meetings on that occasion. in this city, the proczedings of a meeting held at De. Sable, | nents had aright to use the power with which they were similar in character to that silly cathering which took place invested, and they elaim the exercise of the same right so at New Glasgow a few wedks ago, convened to express the | great indignation of the people of that ilk against the Guvern- Temoving office holders who will take partin political contests, #xent lor haying dismissed a petty postmaster who had not: }decency and manliness enough to resign his appointment be- ‘country or inanyage. It has prevailed in Great Britain from fore he set himself up in opposition to those who conferred it time immemorial—in all the American Colonies, especially We may at once assure the indignant folk of De | since the breakirg up of the Family Compact Governments, ‘on him. -—and in the United States, the constitution of which is so | Sable that we have better use for our columns than to appro- ; ; often held up to us as & mode! for our imitation, the practice ‘ ‘ : ia further proof of the intelligenee of the De Sable people, or | jreadily adjusted, by its being explained to the pariies that | re _ peers meeting’? at New Glasgow. Wien a Mr. Nisbett was dis- | sent about his business in his turn; and of course the New! hands on, not excepting the poor old Market Clerk, Gilligan, ‘long as their party remains in office. In fact, the practice of in opposition to the governing power, is not a novelty in any. oD ’ - - has been remedied by tha. liberal overtures of impartial | priate any portionof them to the insertion of the trash calle: ” ! justice, by an enactment tho principal feature of which is, that the Jurors shall be named by the Sheriff at each assize ‘or the business of the suceeeling one, so that the cases to b> tried cannot well be known at the time of their nomination. Bit, perhaps, the Pree Mlucation Act isa measure of which toy macy ecanmot be said. Lt is d Mi-ult in detail, and no doubt experience, from time to time, will point out practical improvements, Cireumstances, of which we shall have to treat, have caus x] great obstacles to carrying out this measure. \t present, however, there is one which sesms, at least for the tiwe, insurmountable. We allude to the falling off, we trast only temporarily, of the Reveans. sible to pay the expenses, ‘The Ideral sum of £15,000 was absorbed Just year in this business. Eicher we'shall be oblige 1 to relinquish, iz a@ yreat purt, the ulvantages derived from this measure, or it must be supportel by new tixation. his alternative, ay respects the pe spie, cansot and will not he resorted to; but nothing weuld |)> more just than that the proprietors-—who, hoodwinied by their azents, will not suffer th: country to prosper by the Goud Parehase Bll—should be taxed to supply ima geeat port the sum deficient in the Actof Mdlucttion. Let iv exeee tingly to be regretted that any xt of mea should be so untierty devoil of Caristian charity as thos: who, on religions peetexts, have pro luce] great dis-' turbance jo the miu ts of many eomccrning this measure; but s itis. DBeieg most desirous to avoil adding any thing to tae pooular avtitution. although it has been unsparingly em- ployed agsiast the Liberal Government, we shall confine ourselves to faets, with the view of counteracting, as far as possible, all the filehoods which have been sent abroad on this head, and diligently and wickedly cireulated by the oppo- sition press, wore partienlarly by the Protector newspaper, a publication |aying elnim to the title of * the Sunetitied Press.” Now it wast b+ clearty walerstoyd] that for years past the Holy Scriptares hays bea in use in all our schools, when their ue was desired by the parcn’s of the scholars. No jnterdies wis place] in it; nor was it opposed by any tech- This p'au of non- nical or practical inpodiment waatever. juterference aeomad ty sai-fy, and did satisfy the pvrople ; wud gach year's raportof the Scoot Visiter imdicaiod tat | reaulutions which find a place in the last No. of their conge } je = a ' . . . i nial of removing subordinate officials, when they are even sas-| ; peeted of chtertaining no friendly feclings towards the party | oS eT heygnd the cow- cil for a special and very important purpose, at a season of the year when it was known that they were busy with their private avocations, and they were allowed the usual Wilcage | fees tu pay their expenses. Mr. Perry had 100 mile to come Was it unreasonable that the Govern. ainent should pay their trayelling expenses on such an oceasion +} —the whole amount of whichonly came to £10 178. 44.2 if ay —Mr. Wightman, 50, ‘the Council had been paid for their attendance—or eyen it Messrs. Wightman and Porry had had their travelling charges allowed every time they came to attend the Council, there pmight be some exeuso fur the noise whieh the Islander hag ‘made about this affair. Whether the Government was right in giving Messrs. Perry and Wightman their mileage fees on the oecasion referred to, will be for the House of Assembly ty sty. The llonse grants, every session, a small sum for the contingent expenses of the Government, to be expended in ‘any way the latter deems necessary ; out of this sum the £19 17s. 4d. was paid; and we are not inclined to think that the members on either side of the House, after granting the sum, | will descend to the Js/ander’s Tevel and wake « row about it Y ; ! om oe i 3 @=eoer — | We forgot to notice in our last paper the accusation of our | very unguspicious friend the Islander, that in copying from ‘the Profettor of the 15th ult. a communication on “ Emigra- | tion,’’ over the siguature of * C. R.,”’ we were actuated bya | desire ‘‘to promote animosity amongst the Catholics against (the Protestants’ of thisIsland. We assure our contemporary } that we had no such object. But it is well to get the testi- |mony of the Islander that the communication referred to was | of such a nature as to excite animosity. It mast have been: ‘fur that object, then, it was allowed a place in the columns of the Protector —a Christian journal professing peace and good will to all men — for although we may agree with the Jslander that the writer of itis a ‘- monamaniac,”’ we can hardly think that the whole Committee of Editors of the Protector are hopeless monamaniacs likewise, bad as we believe ‘them tu be. ‘The compliment to the Protector peuple is, how- ever, naturally inferred from the Jslander’s remark, and we will leaye the gentlemen to settle the matter Letween them. isis ontniy eal a THE WEATHER } For the last three or four days has been of almost unprece- dented severity. On Saturday night the harbor was frozen _over safliciently to enable parties to walk across, and yesterday and to-duy it has become strong enough to bear teams safely. We witnessed to-day the somewhat unusual spectacle of | the cuthing a channel for the exit to more genial regions of a | small fleet of a dozen vessels, laden with produce and bound to the States and the neighbouring Colonies. Notwithstanding the untowurd aspect of the weather, we cannot but indulge the hope that the valuable property mow afloat in oar harbor may be speedily literated from its icy fetters, and realize profitable returns to the enterprising exporters. The deten- tion in this port, during the winter, of the outward-bound vessels and cargoes would be most seriously feit by the mer- eantile community, which has gone through the severe ordeal of last summer's depression. We regret to hear that several. | yessels ure iee-bound at St Peter's. The same may, we fear, | be safely predicated of other ports in the Island ; and such a | state of aftairg mus: necessarily entail great inconvenience and | loss tu parties engaged in the exportation of our staple articles, } NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. EXCHANGE ROOMS, December 13th, 3 p.m., [So8. | Steamer Persia arrived at New York yesterday. No tidings of steamer Indian Empire. The new side-wheel steamers to be put on the Galway line next summer. Great Eastern ex- pected to be ready for trisl-trip next July. Intelligence has reached Lloyds of the loss of eight Qucbee homeward bound ships, including sbips Peorfess, Barbara and Rankin, barques Lady Campbell, Petrel and Claude, and brig Wilkinson ; little or no loss of life, except in ease of the Claud». Lord Napier goes Minister to Berlin. Five miles shore end of the Atlantie Cable spliced, Consuls closed 804. Rogrnt Hyxpwan & Co. - oa + Vo tue Epiror of Tux Examiner. Dear Sin,—The lord of ** Hillsborough Castle,’’ [ am sorry ee — ee o ; ‘to observe, feels much hurt about a little article in the Royal | Gazetic of the 4th ultimo, which, in the Is/ander of the 20th, | he complains, that ‘* nine-tenths thereof is a malicious fabrica~ tion.” In humbly apologising hereto. L beg to state, for his | further information, that on looking carefully over tho said larticle, and comparing it with the sworn information made | before me, I find that out of above 200 words in it three only are mistakes, namely : ‘+ Convictien,”’ Hillsborough Castle,’” and **£500;"’ which, when read as follows, will make alb right :—For *‘conviction,”’ read commited ; for ** Hillsborough Castle,”’ read, a very old wooden house on the east of Allisary, formerly the residence of Mr. Angus McDonald, now living near Souris; and for ** £500,’ read £1400, as no bail toa higher amount could have been procured by the parties. The Castellan will admit that I suppressed in the publication re- ‘ferred to the most barbarous and brutal part of the whole transaction, viz; that, after unfortunate Doolan had been shot, and apparently murdered, the blood flowing from his head, and his miserable clothing saturated therewith, he was dragged by the old chieftain and his son into an old out-house und | Lt is simply i:mpos- ! Islander. The hero or protege of the De Savle Meeting is no less a) the political | dignant Torics who complain so much about the removal of in power, is carried to the utmost extent. Perhaps the in- | person than Colin Holm, Esar., to whose name | parsons, at the last election, sueceeded in attaching the coyetted ‘designation of M. P,P. [t appears that this gentleman held the office of Postmaster at De Sable, and Clerk to the Court. has ever seen. In Boswell’s Life of Johnson, vol 2, p. 354, not a very distinguished the great lexicographer expresses his opinion in the following as to the duty of Government to dismiss its oppo- petty officials have never read the opinion on this very subject of one of the highest authorities in Toryism which the world , of Commissioners at the same place | post for 2 member of Parliament—from both of which he has words been dismissed—in consequence whereof he and all his ad:ai-| Bemts : —* Were [ in power f would turn out every man who ers are in great wrath and tribulation: Of course, his dis- dared to OP Psy Me. Government has tho distribution of missal from the Post Department has been the aet of the offices that it may be enabled to maintain its authority.’’ _— =_o-m © Government, fur which they are no doubt prepared to give a satisfuetory explanation, if such # small thing should be) pie ISLANDERS “SELL’? RESPECTING PAY TO THE EXECUTIVE COUNCILLORS. The Islander has, in its issue of Friday last, fully established required, atthe proper time and in the proper place. The cause of his dismissal, we suspeet—for we do not know it for certain——was his participation in the howl got up in Charlotte- : pk be wets 44h . . z : our charge of misrepregentation against it, with respect to the town in August Jast beeause the Government were foreed to : ae ; : groundless story which it propagated a few wecks since, to Jismiss Mr.-Owen after that gentleman thought proper to oe elie . . ; : eer the effect that the Members of the Executive Council now o ‘brave Exeeutive power by keeping a subordinate in the pablic : ‘ : we : ms Teer e pUONS yeeciye pay for their services as sueh. Tho Editor and his aywice i Ae » “voeutiv owe ‘ MAS i ae aa _ tgs Tr es ~ we ais ve friends seem to have been at some trouble to make out a case /Mr. Colin Holm either proposed or seconded one of the rabi : ss ial ‘ ; r patie 2 : a oe ae um eens the Government on this head, but their researches ; gensieal resolutions by which some of the disappointe: ; : ; ES ee ppombec’ have only gone to the extent of shewing that on one occasion opposition in Charlottetown sought to provoke an outburst of ‘two members of the Council, living at a great distance from popular feeling against the constituted authorities of the land | Gparlottetown, were allowed their travelling charzes ena 5 * ‘ . $ . | ' : 5 > for the performance of a most necessary duty. The design, ‘they were summoned to attend a special meeting of the Coun- as we all know, miserably failed, but it was not owing to the | jj, The Islander’s story, which we contradicted, was given locked up there, shivering with cold for the whole night, ery- ing and piteously praying to be admitted to lie in another old house near at hand, ia which were the remains of a fire, but. | which was cruelly refused to him. Fours respectfully, | F. KELLY, J. P. Fort Augustus, December 7, 1808. ; 5 ited ti inn Srelisginsi sol me tachi hialilisctaseniidiiainiinlaidaien idealist, | Thomas S. Ranney, writing from Rangoon, Bermah, December 19, 1856, says :—‘* It is becoming wore popular, and in several instances I au assured that the cholera has been arrested and life preserved by its ‘use. ‘J'be late prevalence of cholera here has swept off about all the ‘Pain Killer 1 had, and purchasers looking to me for a supply will be ~ disappointed in wy ability to supply them. Please send me an invoice ‘of $150 worth by the first opportunity.”’ Cars Town, Africa, Jan. 28, 1856. Messrs. P. Davis & Son—Dear Sirs « The Pain Killer, we are happy to say, is getting in good repute here, jand its good qualities are being appreciated. Lately we bave a great /demand for the article, and confidently anticipate a large trade in the | Pain Killer. BORRODAILEE, THOMPSON, HAL & 00. Sold by T. Desbrisay & Co., wholesale Agents in Charlottetown, P. E. L., and by dealers everywhere. | We would caution all who bay Pain Killer, to be careful and call for Perry Davis’ Pain Killer, and to take none not put up in square bottles, |with Perry Davis & Son’s nete of hand on one side of the bottle, and |“ Perry Davis’ Vegetable Pain Niller’’ blown im the glass. All others are spurious. | TESTIMONIALS FROM FOREIGN COUNTRIES. | A pleasing travelling companion. and one that no person should be without is Perry Davis’ Pain Kiiler. A sudden attack of diarrhea, ents or cholera morbus can be effectually and instantaneously relleved by it, it is equally effectual ia curing scalds, burns, &c. | | Holloway’s Pills.—A word to females.—It should be understood that ‘we f ¢ 4 ne pi ER .¢ in I —_— t ‘2 or . . | want of an effort on the part of Mr. Colin Holm — whether \in these words: ‘* The Executive Councillors now help them- the operation of these famous Pills is not limited to the cure of those Selves to pay at the public expense.’’ Now, what meaning he strengthened his appearance on the platform of the Unholics by a ispl: uence, is a circumstance of which no ,. : by any display of eloquence, ¢ whieh | would any person, even the must stupid, attach to this sen- reporter sayeth aught. We were very uch surprised to learn tence ? Why, that ai! the members of the Executive Coun- | U0esetvedly as the very best family medicine ‘that Mr. Holm was an officer of the Government — though a | |: eae : : — ; “i — , ee a 7 . ies ~ ro cil, on a// occasions of their attendance, were paid for their the stomach or bow-ls, they invariably afford immediate | Very humble one—~ at the time he took counsel with, and c- services. Bilt the fact is simply this: Mr. Perry and Mr. i +468 : ‘rolled himeelt under the banners of its crentes. t Violent internal distempers fur which they are successfully administered in this country aud all others. They act also as an immediate corrective ‘in the minor ailments incident to both sexes. We commend them most to children suffering frum colic, constipation, worms, or any disorder of relief. In fact, ‘they ought to be considered everywhere, a domestic staple for ciel i | whether of a slight cr scrious character, it cannot long retain its wee A gree ' wars « > - ; greenborn Wightman were summoned to attend a mecting of the Coun- | ary household where they are alwaye at hand. i in existence. If given . »