K .eculd essape,_tled, built themselves homes in the l'IASZARD'S v . s GAZETTE. AUGUST 34. I THE AZTKY LILIPIFTIANS. Within the limits of the re blic of Mexico ‘ Mt there are yet to be less than one hundred asd fifty-three ttribes of Indian. all dents from n many varied ahorig are perhaps the most interesting, seeing that the name has has rendered familiar to us by its being that of the right royal race which, when Cortes in the scent that was Ave times the sins of Spain, oceu ied b7exico by rfiht of conquest, and lost ltte a oreign foe less by want of power to oppose than by lack of knowledge of the applica- tion of means Such Aztecs as did not subtriit to ame wives to the le more hesams their slsves—soch as Vrivlumss. lived upon what nature abundantly we, and worshipped their false gods arbcfore. as Catholic Missions converted many : but these, like the Ceylonese. in accepting chris- g tianit , have never altogether csst ofi‘ the slit use of idolatry. To this day, the gods of Iontelttma have their followers amuog oven the mass-going Indians--just as in Spain itself. for many a long year, more than one noble who knelt at the " adorable sea-ifics” was Jew in blood or Mshometae by dcent. Amid much recounted of the Aatecf that is to- mantic and equivocal. we may gather a few lead- ing facts which will hardly bear disputing. A- mong others it would seem that there is some- where located a tribe of this sinular people, living in isolation, admitting no stranger among ' , an never marrying out of particular families. no consequence of this latter custom is a degeneracy of race ; and one fashion adopted In carts" arked cases of degeneracy is that, when individuals are of unusually minute stature, the are received into the family of gods, and are In subjects of worship. Such is said to have been the condition of the two Astcc Lili utions now exhibited at the Hanover-square coma. Their ages may be‘ the boy's thirteen, the girl’s ten- They weigh about two and twenty pounds, are really Liliputiaiis, have heads not larger than that of an infant a day or two old, with large, brilliant, and restless eyem. Their s_rrnsare rather beyond the usual length. and thctrlegs are somewhat ricketty," caused by the pttsittotninto which they had been earl y put—— thst of Mexican idols, seated on the calves of tlsetrown legs-4 position into which they natu- rally fall when seated by themselves on the ground. They have superb black curling hair, and are copper~coIored.—'l‘lie have no speech c the’ own, but they repeat words readily though im feetly. he most striking trait connected with them is the total disregard which each has for the other.-There is something painful in.it. They notice every individual in the room, play with all camera, and are delighted if visitors will draw figures for them, or lend them a pencil that they may attempt the feat themselves. But all inter- course of one withlthe other seems to be non-exis- tent: they neither look at, smile at, or make signs between themselves. Each asses the other as if y were mutually invisible; and yet, without much trouble, we induced little "Batti” to kiss “ Maximo,” who received the salute iinpassively. aetf nothing more than the wind was kissing his cheek, and be glided on his way unconscious or careless of the nymph who sooth to say, seemed as little conscious as himself. These singular creatures are exciting immense sttsntion—sn attention which will be increased ten-fold when the impatient philosophers and the wealthy admirers of phenomena have sstiated their curiosity at five shillings or half a crown each, and the price of admission is reduced to the. c suflicient shilling. Then the " owners" of Aatec Lilliputisns will probably reap as rich a harvest as did the irer of our an- cient friend " General Tom Thumb. -. {I A Nosu Moivrmsivr-.—To honor the metric of the late Duke of Wellington, n inagni cent school is to be established, at which children of army oflicers are to he admitted free of charge. The Queen heads the subscription with ; Prince Albert and the Duke of Cambridge (the Queen’s uncle) follow with $2,500 each ; and there are several subscriptions ranging from $600 to $10M. The entiresubscriptioii already amounts to $400,000, and will pro- bably be increased to 500,000. Isn’t this better than n pyrami of useless granite ? Srsnn.-—A fast train on the Pennsylva- nia Railroad, when near Greensburg, late- ly ran ten miles in seven and shelf ‘notes, which is at the rate of eighty miles an hour. Tls McxIoits.—lf recent accounts from Great Salt Lake City be not exaggerated, M ism is working its own cure. _ That which persecution failed to do in Illinois, and which the constitution and lttws of the United States have not reached in the Roc- ky Mountains, internal disscnsion s’eem in it fit way to accomplish. The community of Letter Day Ssints is a house divided 'uI itself, and it cannot what upon the pretended revele- ttuaofa im ator, it is remarkable that so lsrge s b y of people should have remained so lon subject to this base delu- ' Internal issensions are now prove- lent in Utah, and threaten to scatter the ' letely as the ptzbien oftsnguea did the uilders of Ba- i Ins 1-us Beers.--A antlsman who had the lastrade at t. Thomas, relays ems fsasy assedstas about the natives there and thstdaa they have of the " Boston ha waass.” lIasneasoldalampot‘ieetssgentte- m-, whe sssta coloured servant for it, with dissedsas tehavs it kept hr the dinner table. ffhessrvssttoekit . abilinqiilrsd ofgahe Oakhewhwastohspreparctb sflsdtssssstas is the ktehas esblsst, it Jsfldtshavehsoilsd. ‘Atd ts muealsdlsrtt ssdwaeiii high‘glas, or he haddemhhed netathsltstei. he hhsdghay s xshevwsge. assa.wtths{vas filtkea rhtssedmsnkey -*0! ' Qlahrne IX 31 “ desk wldsw fisttsastadhiiassmeshasthelgare. GIIIBAI. IITILLMIIOI. The Conference of the Western Church as- sembled on Wcduesda , Jul 81. The Rev. John Louisa was oloc resident almost una- nlmousl , be having 21 votes, and thenext highest 5. The Rev. John Fitrror. wits re-sp- iriimosoi iii" ' r tall tCo in is on wears a y a gen. us it W.tkn|Ql‘I|.gMl been hr idden to rlsit Swltarland by the Emperor. General Ccnclia has written an exposure of the utsl-cdinistrstiou of Cube, and asked permission of the government to-publish it. The Dublin Nation sii.ys—“'I‘hcre can be no longer an question that the systemstisod&i)-o- selytiatn its met with immense success in n- nnu lit and Kerry. It is true that the altars of tie Catholic church have been deserted by thousands, horn and baptised in the iinciciit faith of Ireland. The west of Ireland is desert- ing the ancient fold. Dis-ritsssiim Sntrvrsacx.—(lsptain Young, and the only known survivors, ten in number, 0 the ill-fated bar its Argle, from Bristol for Quebec, laden wit. iron, which foundered at sea, srrived at Quebec on the 5th inst- The account given of their sufiirings is drcudful. It ap- pears that they were nine days in one of tlio sbip’s boats drifting ttbout on the occnn,an that six of those do a were passed without food or water, duringw ich time seven of the men in the boat died of exhaustion and hunger. Of the survivors, two are females‘ one of whom is on old led , turned, we should say, of fifty, who, to ad to her suiferin , was doomed to see her son, a. due stron‘g y ung men of‘ twenty three years old, die 0 hunger by her side. The other female is it oung woman ; und. strange to say both these cmales were exposed to tho some plrivations that tho men were, and yet lived t rough them and saw seven strong men sink and die under tliein.—Thore were twenty- five persons on board the Argyle, including three pnsseii re-—vix., the young womun, the old lady rtm her son—-cl of whom hetook themselves to the two ship's bouts : one of wliic bus not since been heard, of und it is feared that but nine of the twenty-live have been left to tell the and title. ANOTHER Fnttrtvi. R.uLw.iv Accini:.\"r’—l-‘or some time past the American pa ire linvc teamed with accounts of fearful riti way acci- dcnts; and it would uppenr as if some dreadful futnlity hung over the railways in tlic Lnited. totes. During the curly part: oflitst week so- vcral minor uccidcnts occurred, the most serious of which was the collision on the Camden it Amboy Railroad, which caused the loss of four lives. But on Friday lust, cite of those fearful collisions took place on the Providoncc [R. 1.] Railroad, which causes the most fearles to shud- der. We learn fromit telc ph despntcli tliitt the regular train of cars roiu Providence for Worcester, and an excursion train from Whit- neyville, going to Providence and Newport, came in collision on Friday morning, about fif- teen miles from Providence, neur \ulley Falls. Both trains were in full speed, and the result. was terrible indeed. The first car of the ex- cursion triiin wits completely suinslied, and the second and third biidly injured. Fifteen dead bodies have been taken out of" the ruins, and sixty persons are wounded! Among the killed wits the Pastor of Grace (‘liiiu-h. in lfxbridgc. D Q- Srriinzits ro CHINA.--Tl'l0 cplc of tho l'ni- ted States tire earnestly considering the irojcct of connecting‘ the Eastern shores of the ‘itcilic with China, by means of steam vessels ; un ins very short time, we should not be sur- prised to hear of it line ofstoniuors being placed on the rout. A map has recently been plll)lltelI- cd, showing the distance of tho diflerent routes to Shitngline, in China, from seaports on the American continent. From Limit direct to Shnnghne, the distance is 9800 niilcs—from Pcltomts to the Sandwich Islands, 4'i'6(l—Sttnd- wich Islands to Short hue, 4-f79—Sa.n Francis- co to the Sandwich islands, 2l00—Astroria to the Sandwich Islands, 2200-—Snn rnncisco to Sliunghne, direct, 5'i'75—Astorin to Slittnghnc, ‘root, 5350 miles. The Boston Journal, in cousiderin this sub- ject, in connection with the oontenip cted rail- way to the Pscitlc, says-— ’ he Pacific, as delineated on this chart, look: as ifit mightbe easil and successfully navi- steam, and t ere can be successfully tried within a reasonable period, when n jour- ney from Us Cod through the passes of the Rocky Mountsins to the Pacific, thence to the beautiful Polynesian Isles, and on to the Co- lestinl Ftiipire, and back, after enjoying with it lordly Mitndarittn, or n slce y Chinese beauty, a fregrcitt cup of tea, willbe regarded ns it ntcrerpleesure trip of a few months or weeks, itcco ing to circumstances. Swiviutv IN Crrna.—The New York llernld htts information frost Cuba that is deman bee made by the British vernment fore mixed commission nuthori to search estates and places in Cubs for importations of Africans-— that the 8 nish government has com lied, and that the captain general received t c omcinl commission by the last British stesiner. The a merit a so provides for the emancipation o slavery in Cubs st the end of fifty years. Riivsom or run Fsvn A!‘ New Oitutiitts.-—A dcspstch front New Orlcsns of the 7th inst. as It The fever increases with evry hour—htin- drcds are leaving the cittiy dnily. oaths during the wcolt 5 The ofiiciul re rt of ending Friday,t s 5th inst., exhibits the fri ht- ful number of one thousand and flfty—of w ich eight hundred and seventy-nine were from yel- low fever, showing en increase over the report of the previous week of one hundred and eigh- t -seven. During the twenty-four hours, end- ing 6 o'clock ycstsrdny, s. n., ere were in all two hundred and thir -ei ht deaths, one hun- dred end ninety-four c which were l w fever. Total number of desths frotn fever alone. for the eight days ending yesterday, one (lum- s scent! (I . . . The epidemic in the extent amounts to a late and ylsgne. The city wears a truly d nd s cc. Will not lur citiaens, as wall as those of other nor ci r the 1° fol ’ “re _ or re is our su - fin-s 3 tsiisiiiissut In answer to this sppesl, the of New York have subscribed upwards o O 3.000 for rdlef offltsh safiriag brethren in New Or- Orea ha editor at‘ he ' “INW ‘ tu,Cressent City, Qosav-.i~.. Ann. 0. Coi.i.istoii.-—'l‘ha steamer Lady El.iiii.oii her way down from Montreal on Ttiiirsday night. tiiti into the Steamer St. Roch. about niidiiight, ufl'|'ape de la Magdalene, cutting her through to below the waters edge-cauaiag hcr to aitilt almost immediately in from I8 to fact water. No lives lost. The Lady Elgin received but little damage. NEW BRUNSWICK RAILROAD. We are not frtiin the school oftliose who" always know it." and are ready after any event with the everlasting “ we always told you so." We have been disappointed in many favorite expectations, and likely will be again, but we are always as free to admit the mistake when we discover it, its to indulge an honest exultstion when our opinion is 'ustilied by the result. Itlllllté: utyoteverymsn whose ‘tioacslls him to t‘orni opinions and ex reset em, to exer- cise whatever of discretion ‘od has given him, and give out. his itye or nay respectfully but tiriiily; there is no disgrace to such a. one, thou ii the 0\’t‘lll. be out of aorta with all his cttlcu tttions. In the matter of the European and North Al!|9l‘lt‘ltlt Riiilroiid, we were celled the sc- ciilonts of the 0(‘Ct|HIO!| to be the first rovinci- a.lists who“ gitve voice" at the Portland Con- vention. We did so in the plnincst hnd most em hatic words we could coiniunnd. itnd then an since we liiivc ever utlliercd mtinfully tn the opinion that us it great scheme of international communication it wise bound to obey the neces- sities of the rigs and be on itccouiplishment. We held the opinion. we still hold it, tliti.tnl- tliou li it wii.~ in no way to be regarded as _n Proviiit-iiil or oven (‘oloniitl undertaking, it must iii its working out mid working on, be at- tondcil \’t'lill ttliiiost lllt'illt‘lllill|l(‘. ittlviininge to . cw Bi-iiiisiviv,-k. So fair as those o inions go we llll\‘l' <-liiiiigod iiotliing, but we iclicvc we have been v-nti'rrl_i/ too sringuiric in our expectation that HIP _\'rw Bi-iui.m.-ink portion qflhis line was to be und: rmlmi at once, and r/‘v.-sled or soon as mm and nimirry Ftlll/¢1(lt't‘(IIIlp]l'Sl it. The great outbur- ritssinonts Europcitn commt-rt-9 have un- dotilitcilly ufi-ctcd tho nrrttrigcmente of the cori- trrwtorii ; the vcxntions opposition of the Nova- .\.‘i-otiii. tluviirniiiciit. and, pcrhitpu, some, half lie~iirtt~tliic>=s iind duulilo dealing on the partof our own, iiiiiy liitvc ciintriliiito.-ti to dcltty at a limr, it-Iim (fr/rm was all hill with In us, its the cliitnges hitvc since turned out ; but the great, the iliiuiniug iliilit-iilty is to be dis:-uvorcd in the portentous lll.('lC that um’ line has lost its charm and po!mr_i/ vrilli Ihr. Eng.rli.x'h rapilnlis/s; they have obtained li their louse of the Atlantic and St. Litwreiicc line the great desidcratn of un At- luntiu port and :i. t-ouimiinicution with Curiudu, itnd it is not to be tlisguiscd that vast tie seemed to us the rout oiitorpriso of connecting Hali- fiix with tile Aiiioricnii lllI(‘H by the way of New Bruiiewiclr, it bcoonii-si only its fine dust in the lnilitni-ir when plt|('8I'l in i-mnpctition with the gigantic umlormkiii or the (irttnd Junction (Cttuuiliim) Linc. ttuflitl iiiiiazing amplitude of territory. “ Wliiit 0lJl'0 Europa wits ./zmndlc is now." und little wonder is it that the iron and the nll.\‘\'l(,‘S. which \‘t'(!l‘t‘. fillld to be shipped for Slicdiiic. linvc found their way to the M. [Atw- l't‘ntfi‘. it is iill right down gniiiiuon to talk of obtain- ing it suiliuient su iply of lnbor along the line, or from Prince l-I wiird lslitntl, those who are pi-rfui-fly fiiiiiiliitr with tho i,-iiiployinent of lrtbor in tliolocality tclliis tlicria is not enough to be hiid for the ordinary industry ofthe coiintr . Tholinc is liniind to go, und we itrc boun to be benefited by it, but it will not go so soon as has bocii roiniscd. und the benefits itrc more distant t inn our liopcs. ll?’ must trail Ii “ our better: arc srrred." HASZARD’8 GAZETTE Wednesday, August 24, 1853. The Editor of the Royal Gazette says " our ntteution hits been directed to the second para- graph of u. communication, headed On dits Ex- traordinary," which appears in the last. issue of the Royal Gazette; " and we regret to find that an attempt has been made to implicate the Government in its publication." We were itmon those who directed the st- bciition of the pubic to this shameless attempt to injure the charscter of is worthy man, whose only fsult in the eyes of Mr. Whelsn and his particular associates is, that he is an indefpen- ent clliocr, fearless in the dieclinrge 0 his duty. Now we positively deny that any nttempt whntever has been made “ to implicate the Go- vernment." 'l‘he sole person implicated is the .ueen’s Printer, but we most certainly think that the Government willbe implicated if it 9°“ suffore its servant, the mechanic in its cmplo , to attack the character of men hi ofiice, o a much suplerior do and of reel responsibility. In the ot er co ouies with the introduction of Responsible Government, the Government Ga- zette has been reduced and most propcrl , to be the medium of communicating ursly ru- ment informat.ion—publicstion of the Acts of Assembly and such advertisements us must by law be t. icre inserted. Wh is it not so here? The Government, it seems ave nothing to do with what is inserted in the Royal Gazette, but what is stated to be so by express authority! This is precisely the thing we complain of. The Government ought to haven control over it. It is the pepcr of the Government, or r-other of the public, for it pays for it,nnd pretty roundly too, as appears by the public acuunts. And here is the misfortune we labour undcr, of hav- ing it servant whose duties are altogether me- clisnical, sittiii as one of our masters, and making that which should be the organ of pub- lic information, it vehicle for rivate slander and abuse of every body that one not exactly coincide in opinion with Mr. George (‘olea whose mintott we do not hesitate to say. Mr. Whclan unquestionably is. “ [user its an item of news on the_ responsibility of the writer alone rson in no we connected with the Go- vernment"! bh ! 'c do not care who wrote it, nor ' ihm of news. Nobody cares to know, , hits a right to know n it whom the arid levies an execution, much css should such trsnsitctions find their way into the public “papers. It wits a para rsph intended to ye y the morbid taste of t e rinter and his master, and if, the former di not write " the item of news“ he wrote the comments. It is in his style, we remember not a great while since, aeein a psrflpli fkoria the ante pen, relating tofiris a i .wblch if it was not treason, was extremal like it. It must not rorsa ' tsntbe supposed that Queen Fri ter mech's.i:ic':e intend to ofir a . n . hi res asd rea.p..aic an announcement to I) he i’..‘_'5.i'i..i.°‘JIi°,"....'. thccaett sensical to be credited even for a moment. We were at first, as may be seen in I part oftliia srticlcittt I lou to know how if came, thet Editor of its Gazette connected ‘galcuj tohitssslfwillanhi tlon mat on the Government. ever at the lsletahr we find indeed a some sub‘ t heeded “ The Government at- tack on the t. erilof Queen,s Coun ." On looking a little further we found thet our contemporar-y‘s idea of “ The Government” ro- solvcs into “ Geo Coins and Edward Who- lsn," who he says are the sole re iii"! of what we may fairly term the ‘Govern- ment. is we is , and we ccqutt all the other pro hol rs of oflce or seats in the Executive of ing in the least concerned in it. No ! our 0 inion still is, and will we think still continue, t the whole credit of the thing be- lcn to Mr. Whelsn, in conjunction it may be wi Mr. Coles. That Whelan has had a re over the knuckles, we do not in the least doub , _ we trust that it will have the elect of teaching him to confine himself to truth—if it be pcestblle v matter. auxiliary of the Wectly Advertiser are so we known, that any thin that falls from their pen can blsckcn nought ut the paper it touches. It is ssid,by the way,thst the ormcr writes the abusive articles for both papers, it is not un- likely, there is a sameness, grosancss, and utter want ofcithcr wit or humor pervading the clu- sions of both. The spclo made by the Editor of the Ga- zette only ma es the original fault the worse, and its to his pretensions of amendment in fu- ture, for that we suppose the concluding rc- marks were meant for such,they are of asmuch value its the romiscs of a thief while smartin under the lee , made in the hopes of mitigsting the present punishment, but without any inten- tion of being kept in future. We now take leave of this disgusting sub- iect. We hear continued complaints, thet Adver- tisements and Handbills are no sooner posted, than they are torn down or defaced. It is certainly, itn annoyance to it man after having nicely pointed his Shop or House front, or it may be his garden wall, to find it covered over wit posters, which, however useful, are by no means peculiarly ornamental.‘ t is also an ttniusemcnt: to the s——u harmless one they tliink—to pull them of!‘ while uitc wet. So that between one and another casunlty,not half the benefit is obtained b t udvortisc- merits, either to the party who orders them, or to the public. for whose particular information they are ordered. In thinking ofa remedy for his, we came across the print of it man, to whom in London the cunt name of on “ Extin- guishcr" has been accorded; he is re resented its clothed with four boards, wide at t c bottom nnd narrowing towards the to whero they nro sue ended from the neck. c is in short. is witl ing obelisk covered with advertisements. Now it has ococurred to us, that it would be well worth while to erect it standing obelisk, in the. first place, in Quet-n’s .' uiarc, some where in front of the Old Court ouse. about er 1_2 or 14 feet Iii h, stained black for this espe- cial purpose. (2 expense would boa more If the Auctioneers itnd hnlfn dozen of the principal Shopkecpcrs were to join together and each send it packing use to a fir ac- ooinpunied by it 20s. note, we will undcrbke to any that the thing would be done in the 0 course of it day. in this twp good eficts would be ni.-com lis ed. ' e u yould know ‘where to go wi certainty when wished to ” ascertain ifitny article was on as e, and the Bill Striker would be certain of one place, at least, where _there was a 'r c nos 0 his work remaining unruoleshsd. If any benefit were found to accrue to either sellers or pur- chasers, similar erections mi ht be made in th blier four squares and at theliead ofesch public w or . llavo our rcndcrs seen A.Willard‘s Butter Ms- chtncl If they have uot,let them, especially the rural rt: of them, step into the Royal Agricul- tural bociety’s Warehouse and examine it close- ly; they will find their labour well paid for by t e gratification it will itfiird. It is almost im- possible to give an intelligible description of it in words, but of its powers nothing ismoro cesi- lydone. It is in appearance it box churn but the sher is altogether diflerent from those in com- mon use. The cream being ut in, there is a. thermometer which is mar wi a number indicatin the temperature it oughtto be brought to, in or or to cause the butter to separate with the greatest facility. In summer, cold water is ' an outer case, and in winter warm, until the mercury indicates that the proper temperature has been attained. The winch is then turned for a. few minutes and the butter is made; a stop cock, at the bottom of the ma- chine protected by it strsiner, sllows the butter milk to be drawn cl; wstcr is then tired in and the butter is thorou bly wash , and the butter milk pressed outgbynmerely a few revo- lutions of the machine : like manner the pickle is poured in, and the butter salted or re- ther preserved. It is then removed front the wheel or dssher with a wooden spshtle and may be either packed for future use or printed, for which last purpose, there is an ingenious sort of print socompsnyin the machine, which forms an oblong mass, of s in a pound weight we should say, rettily i vented. This is liter- ally making bu by machinery, for the hand need never come into contact with the made, we supppse we must not now call it rasstfsdured, ttrtto e. To run Ellrlbl or Haaxasn‘s Gan1'l'l. Permit me to correct an error in ur notice oftb demise ofthe late Ire. Wigh sn. ted numbering only 74 years of earthly i ims , and deserving a parting tribuh to wor and usefulness, more then many who hyect of powerfiil lsudstions Placed in a public op rtnnltlss of do good, which were not s tnpsasun ,andmanywillbe the regrets, hit for loss of her it smile, comforting w , and dot relie She was no area at the of sickness, whilst bervslue maybe estimated by the sngu isenihstsd by r scrrowing son and daughter. A Nstottaona. The Steamer Queen arrived thi era- ing from Shedisc. with n.....i.'i' ..a an Amerinn Mall. lhamer or aiuiii'iiiiisit’s' left Iltfintu lsluirolock for ’ . . mar hues, arr , psststisii of Isdisg the Prtscds:.har'e.‘fie 3 h . ."I'lIO’UlC.OI,’ Ester tel. arrived yewsvday whh a pleasure party flern iclsihaete. tion sbehad sbtmdant 3‘ IOYAL AGIIOULTUIAL IOCIITY. COHHITTII XINTNO. August 17,1853. raasattr: E“.-ll-dti-Q‘-{vi Hon. J. non, deats John tgstnaiq. Oharlss Jeremiah Sim Vice Pr . . His Honor Judge Peters, Hon. William Swshey lion. Rica, Hon. . Mr‘. Wi Hyde, Thomas Pethick, hip, Alex. Laird, Esq. Mr. Che cs regor. . G.W. Deblois ., President cfNotberu Brncb. On motion of ridge Peters- hattbe ollowinglfrises for Turnips ,1‘ be 0&1-ed, to be compo for in %I100lI’I Coun- ty, this ' the names ofintsn ing competi- tors to be sent in writin to the Secrcbry, on or before the 15th fly of tuber : I IS. For the best acre of Swede Turnips, £4 0 0 “ fl 3°‘ 3°‘ 2.3 8 “ o o. “ o o. " til: “° 3°‘ l 8 8 “ 6th do. do. 015 0 “ best Acre oflste Titralpe, S: 3 3 6| 0. o- Ordered, That an Exhibition of the Agricul- tural roducts and domestic Men of the Is d be held in Charlottetown, in the month of ovcm It V ext. ' The following Resolution was moved by J Peters, earri :- eress, by the 8th By-law of theScciety, it is in the war of an Member to ohr a. Prise for tab is com ti , (subject is the approval 0 the Comm ttsc of the Society), for tiny object which may have I tend to foehr or encouragal an branch ofpurc rurslccono- ,u . y. ere ore-- Re.s¢;_Ive:, :li‘hat notice be iuscrtedfinin ‘tlltle Be- porto t is s ’s roceedtn' ,invi g y, bepdis are oh: minute, (as from two shillings and sixpeuce u wards), or any object they may deem worthy of) encours tit, to communicate with the Secretary on the subject; and that such pre- miums bc advertised by the Society, to beswar- ded in the name 0 e tics oflsring the saute, on the day of the ho ding the Industrial Exhibition, November next. In connection with the foregoing Resolution, th list: will be opened by the Secretary, who will ap to communicate with any person on thcdsubjztit, and afiard such information as may esir . By Order of the Committee. Uuasus Svrswaar. Sccrehry. Geor Beer. son. will preach in the Qjhir. go Bu tist C-littpcl next Lord's day at Eleven end he. f pitst Six. Summary of Government Advutieamaats. Sastusi. Muacrttsoat will on Thasday. the lat day of September next. at I o‘e , s. ., set up and sell to the lowest bidder the placing of! Boo on the Bar of Pinetts Harbour; we re m liiiowii at the sale, which will take place at Bucha- nan's School cuss ; and on Monday the 5th, at 8 o'clock, p. in., the building of a new Bridge on the Montague River, on the leading flout Doese's Road, North. to Neil Msthewson's. Security will be required for the the performance of each Centred. Warrants from No. 08 oftlte date ofths 7th April, I853, to No. 185, cftbedsta nfthe Iltli April, 1058. (both inclusive.) will be paid at the Treasury on demand, together with the lstsrsst dae thereon. To corespcndsnta. “ A Subscriber " came too late for this hy's issue. He will perceive that we coincide is opinion with him, as to the first partofhis communication. We shall svsil ourselves of the pertinent remarks e by ' on assump- tion of the title of“ Pre dent of0onn " in our next. *~i:'Po.rt: ct Charlottetown. anatvxn. Au net 20,_ Fairy Queen, Pictea.——H. M. Steatwc evsstation. do. It , Schr. Aimwell. M'Kay, St. Peters; deal'—§Inn. M‘Donald, Port Hill; amber.-Seahorse, Camp- hsl hfiramlchi; lumber. asp, Lang. Shedisc ; deal.-—Neptsss. do. do.- Unicorn, II'l’horsotI, do. do. - Ulifl Bhtfl Halifax. 28, Schr. Jenny Lind, baits. Labrador; Id.—Itsa- nier Enterprise, ltiehibncto. 24. Steamer Fairy Queen, Bedeqne and fltediac. arnnn August It, H. I. Steamer Devanstise. as a males. 22, steamer Fairy Queen, Bodegas and Shedisc. 2 . Steamer Fulton, PictsI.—Cdr. Ieglhli Green, New Bsdfcrd; knees, dsc. ' I4, Steamer Fairy Queen, Plctna. H. II. Devastation arrived on Saturday,‘ hll called on Sunday on a cruise Port of AIIIVID. A .aoih. Brig Ajax from Iastisc. tslsad.-—Ieh. ‘Ids ,Iloetou. lad. rigsntine Dart. Boston. IAILID, so3..sit...... Ilargaret and Jamie. as Iherhtwck. Launched. Oathslhthisafrcm the?urdct'J.8. Isclilejohsi s hasdsesse Scheeoer Teasealled the lee. On the totli instsnuhlsrgsret. is of libel Tocl,Chsrlottetown,aged year (months. Atc r stews, oaths lsthstsat, Mary Ill- xabeth, ds of r., Thomas fiphy, Eleven men . ‘ ‘- 04. "'4' o. the llthiast by the ttss..w. II. In. Wlllhm Irawfiid. to Uh Cltkuhe J chsrlsttstswe. ~ :- At8tPstsr’slssd.aettiststhhst. - Hr. Dostar Jsakies. Ir. Itewasa. ci|le‘:.|dIat ds of Ir. tiessgs V r's . ii\VafiseI .|I||- (M .. J’ : .''.lt‘'i'..'.‘.‘.''d...-.i-'i'a'-5 5' '3‘-l