THE EXAMINER. as VT 119 'pulpit pronounced to be “« sanctified.” We suggest that it! "tbe ke ; = e ye ec x ain l n cr ° figure in future editions of Haszard’s almanac as ‘St. Pro- ! . . ° \ in === | teetor,’’ and that a festival of its church (whichever that may CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. 1, FEBRUARY 1, 1858. be) be duly set apart in commemoration of its many christian <3 87 j qualities. The reverend gentleman who declared its beatifi- fHE BANK AND THE GO" ERNMENT AGAIN. _cation might discourse, with his usual fluent eloquence, on its On again looking over the article ‘* communicated ”’ to the | virtues, its christian charity, the advocacy of peace and good — Islander, and published in that paper of the 22nd ult., will to man, its careful abstinence from any display of intoler- respecting the Bank's application to the Government—(a | a of the opinions of othomn its freedom from political spite, degree of consideration to which the lucubration was certainly | ite absence from party ties, its regard to truth, and its punctu- not entitled) —we perceive no necessity for reviewing in detail ality in paying the printer. However, as this is the only case, the misstatements therein made, as they are substantially the of which we are aware, of canonization taking place during the same as those previously penned by the same writer, the | lifetime of its object, we suggest the foregoing as topics for falsity of which was thoroughly exposed in a late No. of the glowing eulogies, to be pronounced when St. Protector shall Examiner. Wesball, however, make one or two short extracts b@ve earned martyrdom by the tedious and painful, but very from the article under consideration, in order more effectually | certain process of starvation. to expose the mendacity of its author.@ He says :— The first question requires the candidates’ approval of the “© We charge him” (editor of the Examiner) ‘‘with publish- principles of Luther, Calvin, Cranmer and Knox. Now, as ing a falsehood, either wt/fully or negligent/y, in saying that these individuals differed very widely from each other, and as ‘from all we can understand, the Directors had determined on this course,’ (the suspension of specie payments) ‘ from the very moment they became aware of their probable losses informing themselves as to their distinctive principles, we can by Protested Bills.’ as we,’’ (the IJslander’s correspondent), «have it from several of the Directors that it was only arrer the answer of the Evecutive, AND IN CONSEQUENCE THEREOF, that the decision was come to, to suspend specie payments, &e, oddly arranged on the casting-line. And hence, we repeat, that had the Government complied | with the request of the Directors to relieve them from the) : : - oa ae : necessity of calling on the shareholders, at this time of serious ( favorite word of"St. Protector) of Popish agents for sub- diffeulty in monetary affairs all over the world, (and before verting the British Empire, &c. This query bears internal such instalment is wanted, unless for the purpose of fulfilling | peiduaiie the Bank Charter and saving it from extinction), THERE WOULD | _ BE NO NECESSITY WHATEVER FOR A SUSPENSION OF spEcIE pay-.| imagination of the reverend imparter of saintship; and even MENTS BY THE BANK.”’ the great majority of our people have never had the means of only suppose that their names are selected in order that some loose fish may be attracted by one or another of -the flies thus Question number two implies a wide-spread ‘‘combination”’ of having proceeded from the fertile brain and active his lively fancy must have been stimulated to unusual efforts Now, we ask the reader to contrast this statement with the by an abundant supper of yaw pork, the effects of which on written and published application of the Bank Directors pis digestion are visible in the horrible idea he has conjured up. themselves, as it appeared in this paper of the I8thult. We)! Question number three will: kindly permit civil rights and make the following extract from this notable document, at the religious éoleration! to Catholics, as far as may be consistent risk of wearing out the patience of our readers by its re- with the safety of the State, &e. Of course Catholics must petition. After clearly intimating that it was their intention be grateful to the to suspend, they say :— ‘ | of their power, have taken their church under the (olerating ‘« The effect of a suspension might possibly be very disastrous | to the public, unless some action be taken on the part of the ; ee 7 ane ' Government, by still continuing to receive the Bank Notes at the candidate, the combination, or the beatified journal, is to the Treasury in payment, and thus sustaining their currency. judge of the degree to which toleration of the Catholics may If the Government should not feel disposed to do this without security, the Bank are prepared to lodge in the Treasury, as unknown benefactors who, in the plentitude protection of their papersaint. We are not informed whether be consistent with safety to the State; but as St. Protector a collateral secority for the redemption of notes received, | has taken us under his patronage, we must invoke his aid in| £2,500 on Treasury Warrants, now in the vaults of the Bank, all emergencies, and not question his authority, fur, as Sancho a large proportion of which the Bank received from the Road : Correspondent’s Office.”’ Here, now, is a yuluntary offer on the part of the Bank to | The fourth and last question is a fitting conclusion to the return to the Government their own Warrants as a collateral 8°Ties 48 it involves two propositions, one directly contradictory security for the redemption of Bank notes. In reference to | to the other, and they appear as an appropriate finale to the this point the Islander's correspondent appears to be very Separate absurdities we have noticed. ‘The drummer boy con- indignant, and finds relief from his overflowing bile in about cludes his tattoo by a rapidly inereased application of his a dozen sentences of falsehood and twaddle. ‘ But as if to, drum-sticks, causing the unwilling listener to consider the show the public,’’ says he, ‘‘ that they’? (the Government) previous harsh notes as the very music of the spheres, when ‘had no confidence in the Bank, they conditioned that their | contrasted with the awful crash of sound which concludes the own Warrants shall be desposited in the Treasury as a security | performance. So with the tutelary saint of thisIsland. The | Panza tells us, we must not look a gift horse in the mouth. for the Bank notes.’’, Why did the Bank offer to make such | candidate is to declare his approval of the common school sys- a deposit? It was not proposed to them. Did they feel that | tem, free from denominational control; but he must use all they were not entitled to confidence on the part of the Govern- ment? Surely the Government could not refuse, under the | lawfulmeans to bring it under denominational control, by the compulsory introduction of the Bible. Can nonsense go any circumstances in which the Bank- Directory found themselves! further? circumstances which gave rise to the most serious appre-| We commenced our notice of this article with regret, as we hensions as to the permanent stability of the institution—to | feel no pleasure in calling attention to the vagaries of parsons accept a guarantee thus voluntarily offered for the redemption | occupying themselves in stirring up strife and animosity in a of paper which shopkeepers and merchants at the time | community hitherto differing only on matters of legitimate generally refused. And yet we are firmly convinced, that if) political discussion, and enjoying, in common, the benefits of a the Directors had merely asked the Government to continue | system of education which has done, and is doing. incalculable to receive their notes at the Ti asury, and said nothing at all good to the rising generation, and the efficiency of which must about security, the request would have been as promptly com-) not be sacrificed to the unscrupulous efforts of disappuinted plied with as it was with the offer of security. | Tories, whether they be clerics or laymen. Now, asa refutation to the palpable falsehood asserted by | i ee i dl the Islander’s correspondent, namely—éhat the Government | comPeELLep the Bank to suspend specie payments, we quote, as | THE "TRIAL FOR MURDER. follows, the last paragraph from the petition of the Directory, | We conclude in our present No. the report of this trial, in in which they state that they themselves deemed it advisable | ™S*™ to which the public have felt considerable interest ; to suspend :— ,and we must confess that, not having heard the evidence in lay al oe ‘“* The course deemed advisable by the Directors of the Bank | Court, our opinion of the criminality of the unfortunate 18, that specie payments be temporarily suspended and the | prisoner, against whom public opinion had predisposed us, is eall in the shares postponed, under the express published -| very much altered by a dispassionate perusal of that evidence thority of His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor in Council, | : . ; who will undertake on the meeting of the Legislature to pass |! Print. That he perpetrated the barbarous deed of which an Act of Indemnification, as has just been done by the Im-|he has been adjudged guilty, and for which his life stands ee cade Clb ag : perial Governwent in reference to the Bank of England. | forfeit to society, we have no doubt, although the evidence Space does not permit a more lengthy notice of the topics | on this point is purely circumstantial, but it is so forcible and evolved by this discussion between ourselves and the correspond- clear that it is impossible to suppose that any other person than ent of the Islander. Our readers are aware that we have | McNeill could have been guilty of the crime. But the question acted throughout upon tlie defensive, and we shall leave them | to be maturely considered is— was the criminal in such a to judge which of us has received the hardest knocks in the | state of mind, at the time he took the life of his victim, conflict. It is quite probable that after the Legislature shall|as to render him an accountable being? We believe | being ? meet, a fortnight hence, we will hear a great deal more about he was not. Indeed, most of the evidence on the part of | oe Bank's application to the Government, as no doubt legis- | the defence indisputably establishes the fact, that for the | lative interference will be deemed of some service to our last eight years McN ae eill has been a maniac; and we “* infant institution ;’’ and we have reason to believe that many — _—___—_—_—_——— his ability (of which he has given abundant proof) to keep in| check the revolutionary spirit of France. The mail which brought this intelligence will probably arrive here to-morrow. —_ NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. EXCHANGE ROOMS, CHarLorreTown, 28th January, 1858. Cunard Steamer Canada arrived at Halifax, at 4, a. m., this day, called off Cork for mails and passengers. Steamship Ariel disabled, broke her starboard shaft on the 6th inst., put back and arrived at Queenstown on the 15th. Leviathan is within six feet of the end of her launching ways, and remains in that position, until the spring tides are over, then to be pushed off and await high tides atthe end of January to float her. Reform meetings being held in London and the Provinces, the Chartists taking part in them. Culonel Inglis to be promoted Major-General, for his gallant defence of Lucknow. On the Ith inst., Bank of England reduced rate of dis- count to 5 per eent., the lowest point touched, for 15 months. India news per Europa confirmed. Continued interruption of mails between Calcutta and Bombay, supposed cause of no news from Cawnpore. Column frow Delhi, under Colonel Seaton, attacked a body uf insurgents at Genonree, defeating them, killing 150 and capturing 3 of their 4 guns; 3 British officers killed and 1 wounded. Impression seems to be entertained that the loan for India will be asmuch as ten millions, France.—The Emperor fired at, on the evening of the 14th instant, while entering the Italian Opera, and escaped unim- jured ; the hat of the Emperor was pierced by a projectile. Latest accounts say. that there are 5 dead and 10 wounded from the explosion of the 3 shells thrown. Conspirators ar- rested are Ltalians. ‘onsols 949; four declined Gd. per barrel; corn 1s. per quarter; wheat 2d. to 3d. per bushel ; sugar firm and im- proved ; coffee and tea unchanged, fair demand, Arrivals from hence. Janvary 2.—Delhi. 10.—John Stanfield, Black Prince, Eliza Nelson and Remedy. ‘ Rosert Hynpman & Co. ——--¢- Doe? HORSE-RACING. Tue enormity of the crime of patronising horse-racing, according to the editor of the Protector, will find no parallel in the history of vice or iniquity ; and the Queen’s Repre- sentative is only to be exeused and pitied on account of his religion! for having become the Patron of the P. E. Island Jockey Club!! This is really going the whole hog witha vengeance? Punch and Judy, even with the assistance of the Devil and the Monk, must be totally superseded by this enormity. ‘* A Lieutenant Governor, the Queen's Repre- sentative, a Patron of a Jockey Club! What next?” A parcel of lanky and lugubrious personages, in sable robes, taking money from their companions for pretending to point vut to them thé way to the skies, through a newspaper or otherwise, while they themselves keep constantly walking in a contrary direction! we think that comes next. We must, however, remind the reverend editor, that however much we may admire (according to his broken metaphor) the miraculous force which enabled Samson to put a thousand Philistines to the sword with the jaw-bone of an Ass, that power has not been delegated to him ; we freely admit he has arrived at immortality, after a sort, because he writes to no end. We feel degraded in being obliged to explain to the reverend editor of the Protector, that the Queen of England is at the New Advertisements. PRL INIEININ INI L CLR IRIE LEI RL OSL ae VFENHE following s h bee i fi i I Sauenon yom ave n received for the Indian G. W. Deblois, £2 0 0 H. Cundall, £010 0 Charles Young, 2 0 0 Rey. Mr. Patterson, James Warburton, 2 0 0 for collection taken Stephen Swabey, 110 0 in bis church on the Charles Coker, 110 0 4th Jan. 1858, 415 @ Thos. Desbrisay, 2 0 0 From Mr. Watson : William Swabey, 1 0 O T.H. Haviland, 50 8 John Aldous, 110 0 W. R. Watson, 10 0 Andrew Mitchell, 1 © © A Friend, 20 6 H. Haszard, 110 0 From Mr. Desbrisay : John McNeill, i608 tem Worthy, 110 6 Joseph Hensley, 2 0 0 G.C. Worthy, 110 0 John Barrow, 110 0 Thomas seott, 100 D. Hodgson, 1 0 © St. James Church, 510 0 Wm. Cundall, 110 0 Wesleyan Chapel, 10 11 @ P. G. Clark, 1 0 O Mr. Duchemin’s Con- John Robins, 010 0 cert, 91090 John Ball, 012 6 St. Paul’sChurch, 1015 0 W. H. Badge, 010 0 —_—_-— Edward Whelan, 110 0 £81 14 George Coles, 110 0 : This must be looked on as an instalment, the whole number of requisitionist to the Sheriff for a publie meeting having been eighty ; butit is desirable that the rem-ining contributors should come forward as soon as possible, to enable the com- mittee to furward the money. Feb. 1, 1858. By order of the committte. To sail direct for the Gold Diggings, Nelson, New Zealand. HE new first class Brigantine “SNOW DRIFT,’ Donato McKay, Commaud>r, will sail for the above Port from Charlottetown, on or about the 20th JULY next—is now fitting up ex- pressly for a limited number of PASSENGERS. Passage money, including good and substantial provisions, £33 Sterling. The owner—a medical man—accompanies the Ship, with his family, and will pay every attention to the bvalth and comfort of the Passengers. . For Passage or Freight apply to the Captain, Post Office, Charlottetown, (if by letter, post-paid) ; or to Mr. Jams Morais, Merchant, Charlottetown. ra A few hands capable of working their passage as seamen, or a Cook and Steward, will be = Moe on such wales. February 1, 1838. EXCHANGE ROOMS. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. PPRHE undersigned having decided on opening an Exchange and Reading Room in Charlottetown, to be designated the ‘* Exebange Rooms,’ and having engaged for that object that conveniently and well suited house on Queen-street, latel oceupied by Neil Rankin, Esq., and immediately below the residence of Samuel Nelson, Esq., respectfully submit to the avewed friends of the enterprise and the public generally, the following as the Rules to be adopted for its ma-agement, and the principles on which it is proposed to be conducted :— Ist. Mr. Hyndman will be superintendant. 2d. The Rooms shall be supplied ‘with newspapers of the latest dates from the United Kingdom, the United States and the neighbouring Provinces, and elsewhere, in addition te those published in the Island, Merchants’ Circulars, Prices Current, shipping lists, and such other information of general interest as may be obtained from reliable sources, 3rd. Subscribe s will have the privilege of introducing transient visitors from abroad ; also Captains and Supercargoes of Vessels arriving at Charlottetown, recording their names with those of the partics introducing them in a book to be very head of the Jockey Club, as she is of the Church. Wit- | provided for the purpose, ness the Queen's hundred guineus, given to every established; 4th. A slate will be kept in the room, on which will be race in England; the Queen's Royal Stud at Hampton Court, | recorded daily the arrivals and departures of all vessels, with where horses are expressly bred for the purpose of racing,ana genera] statements of their cargocs, the ports whence they whose produce are annually sold to the public for that pur- | came, &c., also the names of parties arriving from abroad and vse. Witness Her Majesty's yearly visit to Ascot, and tector dare even to hint that the Queen of England does all this for the purpose of encouraging immorality? We assert that she does it, not for the purpose of gaming, but merely to excite @ generous emulation among her subjects to breed the finest, fleetest and best horses in the world. We ean well imagine the entire ignorance of the writer of the editorial in question of the pursuits and amusements of the higher class of English gentlemen. They were doubtless beyond his reach. We ought, therefore, rather to applaud him for descanting so eloquently upon the only racing with which he ts acquainted, and we feel ourselves justified in assuming that his betting- book records no risks but those ventured upon the respective merits of the costermongers’ donkeys whose prowess was tried in the immediate neighborhood of the scene of his education. We surmise this merely from the fact of the perfeet contempt he displays in bis writing for Murray's or any other English grammar. We will give him a parable. We once fell into conversation with an individual of that class, (we mean the costermonger in this case, and not the donkey), and endeavored to explain to him the doctrine of metempsychosis, insisting on the pro- bability that he would one day be an Ass himself, and receive exactly such usage as he bestowed. Being assured, in answer to his enquiry whether there was anything ‘about that there”’ in the Bible, that there was grave warranty for the belief, he appeared staggered, mused awhile and then exclaimed :— ‘* Vel, sir, there’s von thing, if its ever so true, I never hits mine over the head’’—a circumstance which so reconciled him to the doctrine of Pythagoras, that he let fall a heavy bluw upon his beast’s crupper and disappeared ; and we sluped.— oe ——__—-—-- + wees - Cuartotrerown Mecuanics’ [ystiture.—On Tuesday even- ing last. Mr. Wm. Monk delivered a very excellent and enter- taining lecture on ‘+ Elocutionary Reading,’’ which was made doubly interesting by the illustrations brought forward by the lecturer. The Institute was well attended, notwithstanding the evening being very disagreexble. The Rey. John Knox will lecture, at the above Institute, Occasionally, toPother races ; and wil the editor of the Pre-| things will be said in the heat of debate which we have forborne | to say. Meanwhile, the Directory would not do themselves an injarg if they choked off, or silenced in any other way, the indiscreet friend who scribbles falsehoods and nonsense for the Isiander, as he foolishly supposes for the benefit of the Bank. -_--s +> QUESTIONS TO BE PUT TO CANDIDATES FOR SEATS IN THE ENSUING GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THIS ISLAND. Tux last number of the Protector —2 journal having but to protect from public notoriety and consequent contempt the names of a few political bigots and rabid parsons, smitten sore with the delusion that they are competent to guide the public mind a¢ journalists — introduces its politico-religious creed by the above heading, followed by the singularly modest informa- tion that the said questions are to be pat to the candidates by order of some imaginary * Protestant combination.”? Before referring to the questions thus ordered to be put, we should, in common with an overwhelming majority of our Protestant friends, be glad to know something of the constituents of this mysterious combination which assumes to * fulinine over Greeee, and shake the arsenal’’ of power held by the good men and true who, ere yet the Fitzgeralds, Sutherlands and Orlebars emerged from the legitimate sphere of their profes- sional duties, overthrew the baneful domination of an intolerant oligarchy, and gave to men of all creeds and ranks an equal voice in the management of the public affairs of the Colony, and an equal right to its honors. It certainly was bad enough when the house of God was made the place, and His holy Sab- ee the time, for advertisement by His ministers of a forth- coming newspaper, which, we presume, has a large circulation #mong the communion of saints, av it was solemnly from the can only express our unfeigned surprise that any man should | on to-morrow (Tuesday) evening next, subject—* Progressiunal | departing from the City. oth. As the Institution has for its object the facilitating of the various branches of Mercantile and other business, with- out reference to any other matter, while no means will be spared by the proprietors which may conduce to that obj vo matters of a political or partizan nature will be allowed to be discussed in the Rooms, under any circumstanees, bth. Appropriate places will be assigned on which to affix handbills, notices of sales of property of all kinds, &e. &e. 7th. No book or paper to be removed from the Rooms, without permission of the superintendant. sth. A sum of not less than one-fifth of the Subscriptions will be apprepriated to procuring the latest intelligence by Telegraph, which will be made public in the Rooms as soon as received. 9th. The Rooms shall be opened every day, (Sundays and Holidays excepted) at six o’clock, a. m., from first of May to first of October, and at ten o'clock, a. m., for the remainder of the year, and shall be closed at nine o’clock, p. m., through- out the year. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Residents of Charlottetown (Mechanics and Mer- chant’s Clerks excepted,) £110 9 Mechanics and Merehants’ Clerks, 015 0 Farmers, 07 6 (Payable half yearly, in advance.) FRANCIS LONGWORTH, January 25, 1858. ,OBERT HYNDMAN., Raisins, Burning Fluid, Tea, Tobacco, Soap, Sugar, &c. rg°O BE SOLD by AUCTION, on THURSDAY, the 4th of February next, at 1] o'clock, in front of the subscriber's Sale Room— 50 boxes Museatel RATSINS, 10 casks Burning FLUID, 30 chests Congou TEA, (an excellent article), 30 barrels Choice SUGAR, 20) puncheons Prime Porto Rico MOLASSES, 50 boxes Liverpool SOAP, 10 boxes Cavendish TOBACCO, 50 sides SOLE LEATHER, | Reve been so foolhardy as poor Lane was, to keep him asa | Servant about his house, where he had perfect liberty to in- | dalge the paroxysms of his insanity, as he did, so lamentably _and so fatally, against his employer. The man should have | ' been kept in close confinement — not like a beast, as when he was chained down, while under the care of his brother — but | in a place, such as our Asylum, where his mental disorder | might have received proper attention and medical treatment. | When society permits such a being to go at large, it should | not be too exact in enforcing the penalties attached to his_ infringements of its laws, when those infringements are in| some measure the consequence of its own neglect of duty. We | do not know whether it is intended to carry out the sentence | | of the law in MeNeill’s case. This a grave question which | rests entirely with the Head of the Executive Government; | most patient and deliberate consideration. . + + orm | | NEWS BY TELEGRAPH. | Tue telegram given below constitutes the only important | news received during the past week, and the only point of general public interest in this despatch, beyond that which relates to the continued success of the British arms in India, is the notice of the attempt on the life of the French Em- peror. It is gratifying to know that that attempt was as un-— | successful as the preceding ones, for whatever we may think | of Louis Napoleon as a ruler and a man, and however much we may be shocked at the recollection of the means by which | he attained to the perilous height in which he is now placed, | we feel assured that the peace of Europe, and perhaps of the world, depends upon the continuanee of his life, and of ' | father, by the Rev. Mr, Roach, Mr. Daniel F. Keunedy to Miss Priscilla and, we are confident, its solution will be preceded by the) |NESDAY, the 10th day of FEB | 'o’clock, noon, in the apartment occupied as the Court of | mind, or the Genius of Ages. 18 puncheons HIGH WINES, Se ee 100 gross MATCHES. ftlarricd Atso—A sale of DRY GOODS in the evening. : | Terus.—Three months’ credit on all sums over £10, om approved Joint Notes. Soa 18, 1858. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioneer. Positive and Without Reserve! GREAT SALE On the 21st ultimo, in Georgetown, at the resid-nce of the bride’s Logan, youngest daughter of Mr. Hugh Logan. At Vernon Kiver, on the 27th ultimo, by the Rev. James Brady, Mr. Damian MeMullin to Miss Mary Currie, both of Vernon River. At Lot 13, on the 19th ultimo, by Jas. Yeo, Esq., Mr. Heury Philips to Flora, daughter of Mr. Thomas Sullivan. oe eae 2 wm ee att ‘On oe 20d ult., at Crapaud, by the Rev J. Barrett, Mr. John Wilson F TEA, TOBACCO, MOLASSES, SUGAR, SOLE to Margaret, second daughter of Mr. John Halliday, Cape Traverse. Leather, Buckets, Brooms, Spirits, Wines, Soap, Candles, On the 6th ult., at New London, by the Rev. Alexr. Sutherland, Mr. Dry Goods, Hardware, Cutlery, &e., ke. Jenn Mackay to Migs Pane Hashessie. To be suld by AUCTION, commencing at 11 o'clock, on tl a a, tae TUESDAY, 23rd day of February next, and the following Died, days, at the Store formerly knowu as a. " eee 7 i : Hovss,’’ Sydney-street, and opposite 8S. Nelson son, the ee cetiaee — ee enc rens following aiidiin and well-selected assortment of GUODS, » On the 29th ult., of croup, William Martin, youngest son of Mr. W. | comprising— T. Paw, aged three months. 20 chests Tea 5 boxes Tobacco 10 puns. Molasses 50 sides Sule Leather 5 hhds. Muscovado Sugar 2¢ dozen Buckets and Brooms 30 boxes Soap and Candles 25 kegs Nails 30 boxes Glass boxes Pepper, Mustard, Ginger and Coffee Between and 'e ' Patrick Cappen, and another, Defendants. 20 boxes Kaisins barrels Currants boxes Boots and Shoes N pursuance of a Decree made in this suit by the Honour- | a chase ead 3 hhds. Brand able the Master of the Rolls, bearing date the 26th day of | 6 Ps. wand. 20 ottentiegh tite J May last past, there will be sold RUARY port’ one Gis | casks Sherry and Port Wine, 14 barrels Porter. ; —~lso—~ ‘hancery in the Colonial Building, Charlottetown—All that | : £2,000 INYOICE OF DRY GOODS, ' or oe or parcel of GROUND situate, lying and being in | Consisting of —Grey and white Cottons, striped Sbirtings, bles Charlottetown aforesaid, having a front of 40 feet on Pownal- | and fancy Prints, Bed Ticks, Cloths, Docskins, Satinetts, street, and extending back by parallel lines the distance of 84) Orleans, Coburgs, Alpaccas, Linings, Shaw Is, Handker- feet, together with the two-stor brick DW ELLING-HOUSE > chiefs, white and brown Thread, Keele, Hosiery, Haber- and Out-houses thereon erected, comprising one-fourth part dashery, Hardware, Cutlery, Ironmongery, &e. &e. Prince Edward Island. IN CHANCERY, { s i Tuomas Srater, Complainant, ‘of Town Lot No. 50, in the second hundred of Town Lots in| Trams.—£10, 3 months; £30,4 months; £75, 6 monthe; the said Town. | £100 and upwards a credit of 9 months will be given upon Wx. FORGAN, Master in Chancery. | approved Joint Notes of Hand. Sale without Reserve. Charlottetown, January 11, 1858. Ex & Gaz ™ Jan. 11, 1258. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. ae a ee eee SUAS MEalnnane deaminase err oe gE y SN pg aR NR ag 2 8 So OMNES