Established 1323. AEWS EAEMEMS’, JOURNAL, AME GOMMEEQIAE AEUEMTIEEE. Charlottetown, ,Prince Edward Island, Wednesday’, September 27, 1854. ' .2. New gggzu-a’a Gazette. . S III) P iotor and Publisher. (‘EEOKGS 1:‘ ";.-,,,::g ?gI(.|||'.tlIIy utorning. - . . sen . Ilia. Discount for cash in IRVIIFO I I -pgnns or alvlnfullu, f‘ “ - ' ‘ the space a nee, ...'.’:..'.:.:t.:::.'.'."r:.'t':’.".’.:’.,°=-‘-‘.’«h"1« -—lI|inus es.-fl has «.1 5;. iseu Os.--end -- _ One fourth of the uhove for_each continuance. Atlvertisomeutssoutwitheut limitation ,w illhe continued until forbid‘. ‘ ‘ . caster-‘sons. __ I-I[lt‘l‘Y cases of prime ciisnrsqnz. I just received or “ Peeping Toot." "001 I-"0" .Iines.le.—I2line Id.-25 ii a. 5_e.- for one P°° Jlteo. agsantlty of OJIITM. Pitch and Coal ‘I _ liege of White and plllltlu \ law are] Boiled Linseed Oil. For sale by ' - CIIARLES STEWART. June ‘I, I8“. Assurance Society of London. API'I_‘AL £500,000 Sterling. Empowered by Act of Psrlia:lei:.t‘; :)d' Victoria. A Saving Bank for h Widow’ - r ° ‘ ' "r. i'i':A1~tiiiAvit'.stvo.j.. Agent for Prince Edward Island. [[7 Oflce, Queen Square, Charlottetown. September 5. test. Isl Iiarlottetown Mutual Insurance Comp Incorporated by Act of Parliament in 1848. HIS COMP.‘ NY eifars the best guarantee in case afloes. and accepts Risks at a saving of fly 50 per cent to the assured. 'lho present ruliable Ca ital ercede.£I700. Per- ‘ ' harlotiutown, or vicinity, tn the Secretary of marine.’ r Philips’ P hasod by the Company. for the benefit of persons tired in this Otlice. In case of Fire, the use of it n be obtained itnlstodiately, by applying at the cretsry‘s Ofleo. . W. HEARD, President HENRY PALMER. Sec’y sud Trossrer. ecretsry's Ofice, Kent Street. 3 Anya Bib. Ittu. B II‘ JJVD FIRE INSURJJVCE COM- PJJVY, LO./VDON. us-rasmsi-tun sv ac-i-.oe rauniaasuirr. Capital £5,600,000 Sterling. CHARLES YOUNG, . Agent for P. 8. Island. quttsble Fire Insurance Compa- ny of Lon on Incorporated by Jet of Parliament. OAIID OF DIRECTORS for P. E. Ieland.—— Hon. T. H. Huetlamt, Hon. Charles Hens- ley. Francis Leiigioorth, Esq., Robert Hutchinson, 1-;.q., Thomas Deisson. Esq. _ Detached Risks takes at low Premium. No charge for Policies Forms of Application, and uHy other information, may be obtained from the Sub- scriber, atthe Oficeof G. W.DehIois Esq. Charlotte- town. I H. J. CUNDALL. Aprn ‘uh, 1|“. Agent for I’. E.,I. ANTED TO PURCHASE the Hunt. and Sinus of a Vessel from I50 to 200 Tons Rcgister—suitablo for the Coasting Trade. Apply to H. W., Pest Otfice, Charlottetown. FARM WANTED. ANTED, a small FARM. of 50 acres, of which about I0 are lit for cultivation, or from 8 to I2 acres, near which some wood land may be rented. Address B. 2. at the ethos of this paper. ex WESTMORELAN D BANK of New Brunswick. MONCTON, COUNTY OF WIITMORILAND. , HE Notes of this Bank are redeemed at the Bank of New Brunswick, St. John. G I is ’I‘ e: Sscxfit.i.:-Messrs. Allison dt Cogswoll. Cttaui.o1-‘I'u'rowtr, P.E.I.—Jsm'es Pnrdie,Isq. ’ on London and United States purchased at either the Head Ofloo or Agencies. and all descri tiou ot‘_Beak'iag«Basiseas negotiated on the meet - -vera storms. 0'.‘ ‘L. ‘ Ill!!!‘ .0 . Weetnonlesdleskttll. ., " y ‘ ' Itaustuu. tau. ' _ Lsavrno-s-nu tsrzano. Mlle U."-I WIHKIII hIdIase‘_reuiav‘e ' II'0I| this Island. h s but use this Ietmetqht rslsh sessusu hr settlomout. eel-all ;‘f§‘.h::“"“...."’..'.f: -..';_r seine, ,_ assess? I to _ log into i heads as Amok‘.-P. Mr. W. would mesh \ :g°r.et‘."‘OIeo isse 0irsetts'I'e-psr- he National Loan Fund Life CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY HE SUBSCRIBER intendin in ttfew weeks to remove out of this Island. 0 on to sell at rr_iode- rate rates. the following freehold properties, viz:_—- A small Farm at Seven Mile Bay, Lot 27. An in- cloeed Farm of 50 Acres, with a House, with or without the Saw Mill. an the water privilogee (formerly Muxiield‘s Mill) Lot 25. Also 300 ucres on Lo No. 8, this Property to be sold at Indian River on the 19th inst. WEATHERBIL. Charlottetown, July 8th, I854. THOMAS DOUGLASS, sou scum‘ sou BEE’8 BRACE. Commission Merchant, Importer, Manufacturer, end Wholesale Dealer in every description o AMERICAN, HARDWARE, rm. 5 I'LA'l"I‘ ITIIIIT. Tiioseks DOUGLAII, (Four doors from P nrl.) Asa Faun. Jr.. (late of the NEW-NORK. firm of Child, I"arr 5; Co., St Louis. June 28. 6m To be sold, for Cash. SEVEN airs Granite Tvlill-stones, 8 Cue s Codflsh 0' few barrels prime Herrings, _ 20 barrels Meu Pork, 20 do. prime Mess do. 20 do. prime dn. 700,000 Cedar Shingles, A few barrels lloef. ~ JAMES PURDIE. 29th Aug, I854. Isl. 8w OLE-ARING on‘. SUMMER GOODS. JAMES DESBRISAY ILL commence this do iVit:niu:enAir the 9th 1ugustI85~t. to SBL . OI’-‘F his RI'1.\lAIN- ING S'l\)CK of .'lU.\l.\IER IIIATERIALS at prices much under the usual marks. in order to make way for fresh supplies expected by the liritt Autumn Ship from London. Bargains are therefore olfcred of every thingcoining under the above head. SEIJHING OFF AT REDUCED PRICES. , THE STOCK of the SUBSCRIBER remaining on hand, will we otfered at a GREAT REDUCTION From former prices, to make room for the _ F L L s T o 0 K . LOJVDOJV HOUSE. Near the R. Catholic Church. HENRY HASZAIID. August I9, I854. Isl. & Ex. JUST imported. per Native Lass and Esther from Boston, a, choice selection of AMERICAN GOOl)S.'consisting of SUGAR in hhds., barrels, and by retail; Citusiis-.n Sudan; - Superior Snuchtmg TEA. in chests. half chests, and by retail; COI-‘I'~‘I-IE, RICE, I’ILO'l‘ BREAD, in Barrels, and by retail ; Crackers, Vinegar, Mus- tnrd.Pepper, Table Salt, Soda, Sulerutus,Soiip, Candles, Starch, ilurning Fluid, Matches, Tobacco, Cigars, Blocking, Gcc. CONFECTIONAR Y, NUTS, CHEESE, tie. Cotton \Viirp, Printed Cottons, striped and un- bleached do., sheeting. bedtick, &,c.; Ladies’ rind Gent's. India Rubber Iloots and Shoes; India Rubber Coats, Oil Suits. Cotton-wick. |.aiiip-winks, Fluid Ltiinpe, Glass Lanterns, CHAIRS with cane seats and wood»do., in great variety of pattern; Axes, Seytlies, Snenths, Hay-rakes, Hay-forks, Spades, Shovels, Hoes, Gordon do. tro- An assortment of Carrier's TOOLS; Pails, Tubs in nests or single, Clotlics-pins, Brooms, Brushes, &c. Ore Harm, American and Island Manufactured SOLE LEATIIER. Ncuts Leather, Call‘-skins and Ilurness Leather, Red, \Vhite and Plum colour- ed Rosita, Shoe thread, Zinc, and Iron Sptirrowbles. WILLIAM B. DAWSON. Charlottetown, June 29th, 1&4. Sheep Skins, Butter, Wool, &c., HE Subscriber will pay the highest market rice in CAI!-I, for any guantit of IlUT'IilR, WOOL, SHEEP and LAD II SKVINS. ROIIERT BELL. Citarlottetown,June 0th. I854. 9ni A C 0 M P L E TE N E W eing Dressing and Polling ' Establishment. TH! Subscriber begs save to Inform the publte oft’. E. Island _a coidplote set ofhluc Driseiog Cloth, e1usl. if not supe ti Pr V ' ' umrleee of a fir:t-rate workman from Nova Seotls; to supurinteud his Establishment. . ~Asthe work will be executed equal. if not supp rior to done In Nova lends, the prices will not be more than the Nova Seotia charges. - Cloth will be taken in at the Subscriber's gen- DMMOIII, viz:—-Hood of St. Peter's B.-iy, Glenda- luu Ilills, and St. Margaret's Mills; at Mr. William Sleuths’. St. Peter's; and at George T. Hsnsrd‘s Book-etere, Charlottetown. Other Agents will be appointed in dilferentpurts oftho Idand. of which due notice will be given. Agents.--Hoar. Jessrii ‘.‘.'ioii-ratssi. George. 3° 9' : si.x.i...z.- Oervru. srd. Ilt. ltswat. T I! ' ls. Anna. Dixesi. Pisstte ‘ .- :3. f I ;. q|opIoluIlIh,July l0th.IIOt.1 _ , .flM'Vl ‘ . . '“.I"s'Q-Kc MH- fee ,, x._ or Va. '5'" For sale, A FIIEEHOLD PROPERTY of 60 Acres of ‘ Land situate on the Priueotoin Road,II miles fioin Charlottetown; 15 to ‘ _ cleared snd.ieady for the plough: lb!" II I Dwelling House and item on the Premises. It is a -central place for business, several Roads converging from it. 'I‘here is also on the Pl“!!- ses, s Saw Mill, with an abundance of Wood around it. Further particulars can be roads known to ' . ALEX. JOHNSTON. Princetown Road, (11 miles.) Aug. 19, 1854. VIIIIOMAS MANN. TAIIDB. (Lots of Upper ' Queen Street.) beg: to inform his numerous friends thatho has just EMOVED his Bueinemto the House lately occupied by Mao. Woon, inPo_w- KAI. S-rasur, next door to Mr. Dndd‘s Brick Store. -IIIIIOZ NOTICE. ENDERS will be received by the Subscribers for the erection of s WESLEY AN CHURCH 40 I1 30. with s Spire, to be completely furnished by the Fall of 1855. Plans and specifications may be seen at the residence of either of the following per- IOI-III w.o. STRONG, _ ,,,n,,d,“ :::~.::;i:*.'.t¥- 8~"="=~~'::.-§ <=~----'g".°-- POR SALE. BOUT 60 acres of LAND, situated on Township 30, Argyle Shore, rind I1 miles from town; about 30 acres are clear, and the remainder is well covered with Soft and Hardw , a never-ftiiling Spring of Water is within a few yards of the door. and nbundlnce of Sen Manure can be in on the cm. The above property will be sold either with or without the Stock. which consists of2 Horses, I0 Cows, 15 Sheep, together with the Farming Iiiiple- ments. For further particulars apply to EWEN STEIVART, on the premises. 8| Timothy and Flax Seed. V[‘HE highest price will be paid for TIMOTHY and FLAX SEED, during the present year, at George '1‘ IIaszsrd's Book Store. FOR SALE. "AT valuable plot of GROUND at the head 0 Prince Street, formerly the site of the Baptist Clin I, fronting I00 feet on Boston Street, and 104 on pper Prince Street. It is one of the most desk- able situations in the suburbs for a gentleman's resi- dance. or is capable of being divided’ into three good building Lots. For Terms, &c. apply to W. H. POPE. June 8. BRASS FOUNDRY. AND MACHINE SHOP. BY H’. C’. HOBS. TOW open in Great George Street, on the old Stand. Old Copper and Ilrnss bought. Au Appretnice wanted. , May I3. I854. Carriages ts Carriages! Carriages I 7]-"III? Subscriber, thankful for past favors, takes this opportunity to inform his friends, and the public generally, that he liiis removed to Green's Shore, and will be prepared to furnish Carriages, of every description, at the shonest notice; and he hopes by punctuality and good workmanship, to nicritu sluire of public putronnge. JOHN TODD. TO BE LET, And possession given on the First day of May net! HE DVVICLLING HOUSE and Premises near Government House, at present occupied b Captain Benzeloy, consisting of a Dwelling House which contains a spacious Diniiig-room and Drew- ing-room, Breakfast-rooin, 1 lied-rooms, large Kit- chen, Servunt’s lltill, 3Servant's lied-rooms, Pantry, Lurder, Front-porch. large Entrance ilnll. large Inner Hall, Back-porch, 2 Buck entrances. Brick and Front stair-case, Scullery, Pump and Wnsh-Ilouse, Lum- ber-rooni, and ti endid 6 roorned cellar. large anrl commodious Conch-house. 3 stalled Slnble. Harness-room, Cow-house, lnrgu Hay-loft and Griiio-room, Mniiure-yard, Inrgc Kitchen garden with I-‘ruit trees,&o., Flower garden, elegant front entrance and carriage drive, n large Lawn running down to the Harbour with convenience for keeping bouts, 6r.c. Extensive plantation of young trees c all kinds. large lloot-house. Wood and chopping house, and a spacious and comiiiodious yard. There are front and back gatesfacing on ditfsrent Streets. and u never failing well of water on the entities. 'I'liis splendid Mansion from its situation com- mands the finest view of any house in Charlottetown, and from its proximity to Government House and other advantages the Subscriber confidently etfers it as the most elegant, comfortable and desirable resi. deuce tor a gentleman's family in or near Town. For further particulars awtly to DAVID ILSON. Richmond Street. Sept. 6th, late ‘ Form for sale. VALUABLE PIIEEHOLD EARM situated on Lot II.and hunting on Brudenell ltlvor,st the head of the Harbour ofThree Rivers. and three miles from Georgetown,it contains 105 acres of hind.4§ acres of which are cleared; and for soil and convenience. is not surpassed in this. part of the country. and is well worth the attention of any person wishing to settle down in a good and pleasant situation; it-will be sold with or without the Stock, a miriediate l‘1'£1‘I‘.?I;i§lIT?ta..'.”.‘}'...'.1'lf°2.".L'1.2'..l..a." ''’w'?. I '" '" ' ti. toririsroit. equates, tau. 4... ,..:'llehoNottco " Sohr. ‘Pussies,’ from BOS- ‘rs ‘. y. acres in‘ trueae-v soi'i._i:its_.“-w ‘“ ” OUR EARLY DAYS. Our osi-ly days--our early days! How of! they thrill the I honing chain l 'lI‘lhoir secret sympathies an.d“Iiars memory’ ' k Like i.....'. ".'.'l.'.'.l."l‘.1.’ ..?’.'*.'1‘.'?.:.. as. Our earl days; gs , rl d ! Uu\‘l_Ve _rIew th_e_m autelh tl:syt.'s told; _ olding a s , To deck lWIIU:mI::l'Om‘.IItII?ll.lll7IOI . Then fade away like dreams of a Our earl d , th , Whlle’clo.uyd's $73.: part; A'sd hope. with her sweet angel lay. Doth cheer through many a smiling day The inmon chambers of the heart. Our early days; too soon their flight Brings graver-Ihoughto and deeper cares; With many struggles for the right Amid the shades of lifo’s dark nights, And fills its measure up with tears. ' Yes, early days hear on our minds is impress time can ne'er wear out; Each fount of feeling ins retain Some early dream not wholly vain, To linger yet our way about. HUGH MILLER, - on THE burn or nis rinsr citii.i>. In the spring of I839, a and bereavement darkened my household, and for a time left me little heart to pursue my wonted amusements, literary or scicnti c. We had been visited ten months after our tnitrringe, by a little girl, whose presence had added not a little to our happiness. Home became more emphatically such from the presence of the child, that ins few months had learned so well to know its mother, and in a few more to take its stand in the nurse's arms, and to recognize and make signs to its father, as he approsche the house. Its few little words, too, had a ftiscinutingintcrest to our ears—our own names, lispcd in a language of its own, every time we approached ; and the single Scotch vocable “ awn, awn,” which it knew how'to employ in such plaintive tones as we retired, and that used to come back to us in recollection, like an echo from the grave, when, its brief visit over, it had left us forever, and its lair face and silken hair lay in darkness, amid the clods of the church-yard. In how shorts. time had it laid hold of our affections! Two brief years before, and we knew it not; and now it seemed as ifthe void which it left in our hearts the whole world could not fill. We buried it beside the old chapel of St. Regulus, with the deep rich woods all around, save where an opening in front commands the distant land and blue sea; and where the daisies, which it had learned tolove, mottle, star-like, the mossy mounds; and where birds, whose songs its car had become skilful enough to distinguish, pour their notes over its little grave. The following simple but truthful stanzas, which I found among its mother's papers, stem to have been written in this place-sweetest of burying-plnc_es—u few weeks after its burial, when a chill and backward spring, that had scowled upon its lingering illness, broke out at once into genial summér: 'I‘hou’rt “ aws, own," from thy mother's side, . And “ awa, awa," front thy father's knee ; 'I‘hou'rt.“ awa" from our blessing, our care, our ca- reesing, But “ nwa" from our hearts thou’|t never be. All things, dear child, that were wont to please thee, -Are around thee here in beauty ' ht,— There's music rare in the cloudless air, And the earth is teeming with living delight. Thou'rt “ awa, awn," from the bursting spring time, Tito‘ o'er thy head its green bnughs w v The lambs are leaving their little footprints Upon the turf of thy new-made grave. And art thou “ aws. awe," and “awn” forever,- Thst little face ,—-that tender . frsme,— That voice which first in sweetest accents, Call'd me the mother's thrilling name.- Thst head of nature's tlnest inouldiag—- Tltoaeoyee, the den night other’s blue, Where sensibility its dows ‘Of ever-changing meaning threw? 'I‘lx"ewdls_“o=. petieses s_nderd-suffering. _ _ as an opening y Must Ikltirind told that to subdue thee Would need but love’s most gentle sway. Ah me I t‘wes here I thought to lead then, And tell thee what are life and death, And raise thy serious thought's first waking To Him who holds our every breath. . 1; rs » .-I-."' cf.-houkltoldrujfl ta'tt'I|ltah’sstshtouousge -i-iii: Lotto suiiiisa or fr'us sac-sic IlO|08Ie . . In Doctor Kane's Journal of the» GI-isue Expedition in search of Sir John 1,‘:-anhiirt, occurs the following account ofjllo Isla- ence of the prolonged arctic suinitier , “ The perpetual daylight hurl continued tip to this moment with unabated are. The sun had reached his north In its altitude some days before ; but the eye was "hardly aware of change. Midnight had a sotiened .charscter, like the law suit! ','_s sun, at home; but there was no twilig t.,_ _"At,,lirst the novelty of this great, uncsrying day made it‘ pleasing. It was ,c_uripus to see Ih0."»lIitI- night Arctic sun set into sussisofand». - sent to find that whether you ate OI‘ s pt, or idled or toiled, the same dayI' ht was et- ways there. No ii-ksortie night creed upon you its system of compuleorywltsruetions. I could gline at midnight, sup at breakfast-, time, and go to n ; and but for an apparatus of cage and coils, called a watch, would have been no wiser and no worse. feeling was at first an extrava- gant sense of undeliied rcliel'—of sortie‘ vague restraint removed. I seemed to have thrown oil‘ the slavery of. hours. In fact I could hardly realize its entirety. .. The set. ral lamp, standing duet-covered on our lock- er-s—I am quoting the words of in 'euruuI --puzzled me, as obsolete and fanciful. This was instinctive, perhaps; but by and b came other feelings. The perpetual light, garish and unfiuctuating disturbed the. Ibecanie gradually aware of an unknown excitant. y sleep was curtailed and ir- regular, my meal~hours trod upon each -other’s heels; and, but for stringent regu- lations of my own imposin , my routine would have been complete y broken _up. My lot had been cast in the zone of lii-io- dendrona and sugar-rusples,inthe nearly mid- way lntitude offorty egrees. I had been habituated to day an night; and every‘por- tion of these two great divisions had for me its periods of peculiar association. Even in the tropics I had mourned the lost twilight. How much more did I miss the soothing darkness, of which twilight should have been the precursor l -I began to l-—wit more of emotion than a man writin ibr others would like to confess to—-how ‘admirable, is a systematic law, is the alternation ' of day and night; words that type the two rest conditions of living nature—sction an re- pose. To those who with daily labour earn the daily bread, how kindly the season of sleep! To the rone, who, ll ed b the wanting daylight, hastens the de erred task, how fortunate that his procrastination has not a six month’s morrow ! To the bruin- workers among men, the euthuoiasts.. who hear irksomely the dark screen which falls upon their day-dreams, how benigusut the dear night blessing which enforces reluctant rest ! ” GREEK BLOCK roii. THI Wasurnoron Mo-, NUMIt‘.N'I‘.—-An Athens journal says :—The Greek Government has selected a tnurbio block in the Parthenon, for the monument of George Washington, now being raised in the city named after him. It is to bear the following inscription :—“ To Geor a Washington, the heroic general. the big - minded citizen, the founder of Ilodem free- doin—the land of Solon, Themistoeloe, and Pericles, the birtli-place of ancient fieedoui, dedicates this old marble as a sign of rever- ence and admiration. " Farina PsNs.—JVicltols’s Journal advises Congress to pass an act directing every frying pen in the country to be broken up and sold for old iron, and that no more be manufactured for ever. It is alleged that frying is the most unwholesome mode of cooking, as it saturates the food with fut, or butter, renders it tough, covers it with empyreum oil, and makes it utterly unfit for the human stomach. Ne dyspeptic should ever cut an ing fried, nor any erson desirous of avoiding becomin one. I the food be boiled, roasted, bi-oi ad, or baked—-anything but fried-—if it is desirable to avoid difioulty ofdigestiou and extending human i . N sw Gout Doi.i.Aa.—'I‘lie Secretary of the Treasury has sanctioned s new gold dollar coin, about to be issued from the Mist at Philadelphia. It is about the diameter of a live cent piece, a bears on one side an Indian head with a crown of e_sgle’s feath- ers, and on the_othei- a wreath, surroundi ‘_';':{‘_"'°'.f the words. " One Dollar." On the whole, it That glory‘fI'0tn thy Ssviour's presence is a beautiful thing, and its greater diameter ' Ktaittesnbe emu apes thy hrewl wilIub:‘litk':.ly :2 $10 it more..g'e:er°ailIy a‘: t — e or n a at u no °- ‘Ll.’ "rI:'°|Lr.a‘si'ts.ke:thv.rb.'“ zit‘, which has |iI'W.sd s Inconvenient tn. ., gag hug . ‘ , ' eed,'on account ct’-itst dis_l_uter.' '““"°"""_f, ,_, , ,', , , _ _ , A DAIIIIO Ac-r.‘—An audsoaiuus robbery , * A n. "‘fJoit_ep‘pirt6RL--One "" ''°'9-°-'''-4‘''L" 3' m""‘—'1"' "'3"! ‘ I his .3 _‘ , ‘ eeeoeoeeieesenynenshn it-,