ttt aoe emerson sere aint inasinatittheln } our party by the Jonrpal of which we had; oe Gu wh te Sy’ a & “4h R uy ie % : ; ” , a uv ‘ . $39 e ii he 2 @043 ad 2 ku La RD > : -. cate OOM ID LORIE kaos 88 AE So Sg a OTE : . COILS CL 98 De hee Na ; PETE TS OS BE TOL TANT! OTT IO TR a NR AA A ETS RVD eran ee : . + _— = —. ' ere ee ee e part of the Govern 5” PRI terval to day, aod must enjoy tae privi-:that thits question Was every year rising ol a refusal on th part oO, tn roy or A 3 TALE i Ri of . . * . , gt . } . - v4.7 ‘. ledge of speaking of ourselves und of our mn MAporlanec anid popularity ; and wt oO comply with its demands. ve ou Tue editor of the Island r pnblishes by ; ' ink th fe cannot be charged with an|cested the vote of want of confidence—| ‘ ‘ 3 an labours. think that we cann har gs \5 . jorucle in his last paper in which he j , ® ar "| oa . salt : } ‘ i ry ; * oJ ' ; ie ; : ’ In ihe Summer of 4843, fresh from the undue vanity in asserting, that our paper) we connselled the stoppage of} Pe eke to shew that the Examiner q , &. ! at ra mak-toe | fer rcssort The only ameusure! a SORT ; ars ol} ; Nova Scotra.; was infy entitied to the credit of mak-las e ernier reseort 12 ONY AMeasu4re . : ecene of Labs ral { outics in Nova scotra, ; Waa main \ enhite c d . i stone d {to imsu't the whore far ning popn- ce ; +e 5 ans mree is Ouriag ¢ tip priety of which we ente: ji ey and flushed with the inspiring hope of ing It understood snd appreciated. :, : lation of this Island peeense it gave os : : — i wy 31 3]] } - ancoure tained a donot, Was the pronosa: to com oe i being in no small measure, acceseory toa reward Was still any thing bot en pro} publicity. to a communication, in whigh . : oe |. ° ; R1Q ca | lew seinen msaie retirin? officers by oyvin: pienm chance in our social condition, such as/ing:—in 1819 several hundred pounds) pens a at | Duncan was numeronsly styled “ men). (man,” and quizzed for his love of por and gaspereaux! We don’t believe that d ‘ . a. Wes st ’ ih-isubordinete = situations, The motive that v hich has since been effected, with were due to us by Tak ILXAMINER S SU0 | ; : | : ; -. ‘ . ee se « ; arve 2 ne wunt oO} which aictnted tis proposal we per ecl- immense advantage, in nearly all the scribers; and bai large an aponin i Ci Y dia t aas d a sur books, our energies were,}!¥ Ubdersiood,-—It G ome (a eee ‘ am : ae ‘conviction that these officers hod any {the Puente, Onno ae attemps. to the notice of the public through the/of course, crippled, and our spirit discour-| © oe ) : - iedto be practised, in the hope j | ’ Pr } aged, We suspended the publication, | claim whatsoever on the parly making ed to .? : . a that it may columns of Tue Patrapium. Por we |the proposal, but from a desire to bring to, arouse il] will against us, and crea, nigh two years we steadily exposed and] We were unable to attend to its man- 1 ti a speedy settlement the differences exist- favour for Maclean—are quite £0 fooligh sment personally, and at the same time j, ‘twe ‘ » Lieut. ro-jagement pp y, ani ing between the House and the Lieu as tocere arash Shem whet Du assailed the abuses of the existing g hel bile ry ; bad faith of ‘ ot (Oe | ta! nm in Governor. The subseque: ad faith o vernment—encountered the hostility of te our duties 1 the Legisiature, t e governor quent ents, or any particular. name by which i ° thei ° Session, the backwardness of our subseri-| the latter shewed how little he appreciat-) eats, y p ve by which he men in power, and that of their depen-|"® a f led the motive of the House, and confirm- may be described. The inference op dents, by vindicating the claims of the|bers leaving us without the means of em- We this point, drawn from the article headed ed us in our dislike of the proposal. “a voice from the interior,” is totally on- other Provinces. we introduced ourselves poor to exemption from oppression andjploying additional force to carry it On, forebore, however, to urge our objection oe ee : i ba : ic : sing rather to set xt rest , ..1 We trusted the suspension would enable publicly, choos > : : we “a: ss ues; 3 ment, in common, of every political privi-} 4s during the recess, to collect our d 6 ‘encourage our adversaries by the appear-/ Duncan eats porridge, is not, we think, hp . ° ° } j wa a liis!, > F see ie . lege which the Constitution of the Mother} at at it "i credited, that Mis v Wo | of dis: ee ao oo rtd any more of a reproach than it would bp ~e , , s ave reason to beneve now, thatifi ~ Gountry will allow. Our reward was suchj!™e, by far the greater part ol them re eh : : " , . the House were called upon to coumence|!0 soy he ate roast beef and plum-pud- ‘its negociations and proveedings de novo, ding: the misfortune is, perhaps, that he lesson—as falls to the lot of nearly every] Still loth to desert our party whilst the no such proposal would be made. nik L : the : | Whether, then, ‘Tne Exam ner has proiuc man who trusts to the cenerosit¥icommon enemy was unconquered, and. wath ts ’ PY: ‘ \ ‘ ’ : ‘been serviceible in defending the posi-| Before trading on the sympathy of the bli et tion of the House since the prorogstion! farmers. Maclean should retract. the puosic—w ho are Incapaoie of appreciat- and nearer to the consummation of OUT in May last—whether its publications numberiess insults he has flune in thefr . = ° : ° - . . S ing the value of intellectual labour when desires, our feelings deeply interested in have been suitable antidotes to the poison ; | , a 7. mr ae 6 Pole! & ee since he became the mercenary tool it continuance depends solely upon their|the struggle, nursing, we will confess it, disuiled through the columns of contem- the official facti Week, at : ;' ii of the official faction, e ask, 18i pecuniary assistance. Inthe Spring offas hearty a hatred for the domineering POTTY Teves, WY: ata, (rae. 0ae = ~ readers to determine. It is quite prob-|j » fi < rs 1845 we cersed ta publish the Palladium, spirit of our adversaries as that with! able t! mo insult to the farmers and others to be told continually that they are incapable of | hese poisens would never have and devoted the reniminder of that year whieh our veins tingled in times past, taken effeet with our own people, even ae me exercising the privilege of self-covern- unressenable to belheve that our fellow;/ment? Is it no insult to the farmers an& ehiefly to the arranzvement of its affairs, and impatient of our self-imposed res. Had we not published a line; but it is not subjects abroad, in the Mother Country!others tobe asked to continue their istending io ] After, however, the ap aby hye : we } i Alter, ever, from the scabbard, and turned ovr fece and thee 28, Where the motives : igarchiys ' eo est 7 ena s ’ c i © and the colonies, where the motives and countenance and support to an Oligare Prorogation of Parliament in TR46 azainito the foe. passions of onr adversaries are nat so} " € 2943 Var 2 igen is n easily seen through as they are here—|that has uniformly despised the peoples would have totally misjudged the conduct! rejected their complaints—fattened on- a . > " lew rhage ¢ ee ret . actu “; 1 . ; ‘ , * . . ‘labours in January ast, W hen an iniport- and Capacity of the hia ily, from the their taxes—in®reased iheir burdens, and, : , ee ient and apparently unforseen event. ren DigIny Co oured, ang, in many cases, were persuaded by some political friends! ; ' , pustively false representations of the tai 4 , jdered tue establishment of a libera! opposite Press. had our Paper failed to becoming a principle of our Government? counleract sneh representations, and set/Is it no insn!t to the farmers to be told ‘advancement of the popu] ir interests.— ev: ry matter in its true lberht, that in thei selection of Representatives, the death of its proprietor, advocatine the! ; id , n 17 er 18 instances ont of 24. thev dis —~and bitter experience has taught us the main unsettled. has not the latter as often as the former. rather than the justice of a non reading! when every day was bringing us nearer eave the Islind early in the traint—we once again plucked the swerd following stinmer. we became embroiled eh the mis- , nbdroiled, through the mis-! wre had hardly resumed our edstorial represenintions of the Constitutionalist, wm the party equabbles of the time, and os ‘langhed at the idea of popnlar contronu) to undertake the editorial management of] es a (Journal of the utmost consegnence to the the worming w¥ews, which we held up to “64 ; ‘ N rie rine afr wr 3 } liye. From February 1849 up to that period) . 52. uch having been written in allu-|. sien to the political character of Tur\ fall Cxawiner, that we have left ourselves| Played the grossest ignorance and follye . ’ . ‘ i . ° * cating through the Press their sentimets little or no space to refer fo other matters that they abused their privilege of thy Mito the public, Two of the papers then connected with it. It has been constant=' elective franchise—that Duncan Maclean, fo tne present hour. Atthe Election fin b fame principles as those for which we... Totes (es 7 for hich w ithe Libernls had no means of consmuni- contended in the Palladium, aud for! which we have continued to stroecte u 3 ees TG ott” dablihe te thats. fe Mibeaibien Ea a1 ; emg were, as hitherio, avowedly hos-! 'y Our (it Sire Om ke t itiractyy € as a and his amp lovers in Charlottetown, who depository of select Literature—diffusive | ‘tile 9 party : hepre } | wll . os hi ae . cs not oniy by our writings, but our. votes, He: {os the: pantyimadiithéthied ‘obsery of a sound and healthy taste for such|have a direct interest in getting 1 packed ‘ ’ Cs, tes, « Dances att oi a wile 3t aM : wah . ; pan re Ta aden ‘ed a decided neutrality in polities, Pa 'yireading oniy as serves to improve the and corrupt louse of Assembly, have a he views « i ar with which we ¢-_.1: : . ; oe a ee onthe J ie tI . ong i iy ” 4 nat : ay * . nin vt feeling rose high, The claims of rival ne art, whilst it stre nethens and informs better knowledge of the exact cescriplion wu become connected, and in whose suc- ithe understanding,—an. likewise as the : : oe pha 7 ee. ! at he} of men that shonld be invested with faithful chronicler of every passing eveut| pie re : ‘i ths a 4 me ry W here the subject of discussion : bu! ' which it is the province of the Newspaper. leoislative power than al! the constituen- ver, OECause of the pers rons and ca-!., ‘ 3 i ? . et eo ‘ , jthongh the Liberals might have hed the|{o recerd; but we niust acknowledge that| cies in the Island put together? Is itno umes With which we were assaijed—! iF y i Ls a eck’ * fe ‘ ote a i jbest of the argument in occasional fire-| VW have frequently been compelled tol insult to the farmers to be told that the re sourht and obtained a seat In the Le-| side conversations and sunenebiin ; foreso the gratheatton of this desire, In} ; re 2 J si + ‘ asstf *re-j; ’ ; isleture. Incurring this responsibility — ae = Pere" order to give up our tine and space ta.the - ine Bis Me purring ‘his resporm ‘7 igrinations, their influence would havel discussion of party questions, often forced |S¢fsh and unprincipled—that they are > term | | rentos public ri ; i * ter heen vamensely curtailed throughout the Upon public avention for the worst pur-|swindlers ond betrayers of public rights? of our senstorial apprenticeship, we were y. ; . i poses ; : { > Jour-| ay i apr Ds ‘Island generally, had there veen no Press| Poses ee al vigitte ents E soNF | Thera : : : re i Hais, ine determilnation we have tormed |! : = ve ;LO aG Ce ta > " ia "Das 2 ee - - - . * > } ° } ley Jssn } 5 : os aavocate their Princrpi¢ 8s. j HE Exa ito discoutinue the Seni VV eekly issue, | SLANUL? issvend since the last Election 'MINEI ; a t at once supplied the desideratuimj and, When + @:@esary arrancements are) but what will be found to contain insolt- suming our former occnpitjon, The! ms lion oo : erie ? : Tr . ‘y ' , , ’ he yy ; , ; “nt nf a7 discussed and re-discussed the priucs- mace, to put out { HE EXAMINER once aiing r@ectpons sucn as these : and yet the publication ef Tne Exasiver in [847], ' August, 1846, being solicitous to promote : ‘candidates for legislative honours were cess we lind felt a stronger interest than men of their free choice, are ignorant, and morally bound to serve ont th was scarcely a number of the ’ constrained ta abandon the project of re- moving fromthe Island, and set about re ples of the party counteracted misvepre.| "eek. on a sheet double the size of the, wee, therefore, the result of eur own! /present—will the better enable us to carry} a , ’ é' pout the object of ci¥ving our Panera mor iself into a passion on being reminded many topies which had for months be ‘nf general, literary, and miscellaneeus cha 4 hameless editor of that print works him- presentation.and diused.information upon alection, liad we beenunentrnsted with} ' “hi lof his oatmeyl, and-ealls upon the whole } the confidence onstituency, iat: 7 ¥ : lracter than it is possi} ianine ; ; ; e confidence of ac ueney, 1418 dead as Julius Cesur, and just then disen.| "0" than itis possible to impart to the faroune comannity to stamp with their 4 , 1) rt OO ev Arr sa 7; barn: la loot ry 7 o> } h r *) ¢7 nT Tr ™ . £ wher Ww ¢ ' ef anne: oan ? ee i . ws IsSmaHersneet, as we Wii then have about! .. . paper would never have appeared, » ft tonbed to serve the purposes of the Elec , fp: . mi , {disapproval the fancied offence! Tle ig more than probable the tield in which). | vt ‘tiom. We do not suppose that without our 4 columns in one rember toe Gl! with . sei] reading matter, while now the demands!taust bave considered them very foolish HID lid Po... ) aa ae. te 7 oh ee a Acie : . ger , ; ; ' ; : +) t ress the ! arty would not have bean tri- upon our Space for ad eriisements, all, Wy and thin-skinned indeed, wien he penned, Pra) . ‘ ’ } Ty f. ' . > > ‘ 3 es : ; och : yourns ist woutd have found no one ‘ umphant ; but. at the sume time, we trust |'5 only 1G columns far the LWO, ISsues.},-. a a ‘ee \ : UE, wat i 9 iors ranting appeal to their sympatay. his arrangement wil, as a matier of, ™ peor : | te ‘ , nents sic ea te ids icourse, involve additional expense and} Dunean,evidentir, cannot bear to be- dehieving tuatthe infeuenee of Tur Exa-tiat ee fore pecans a Ria = : pag A sh bbtrig, ai ica cltath A he Hitag to iy We’ veve thet anything which appears in this, MINER availed not a htle in obtaining aj must insist upen all on subserjbers who! : . . . : > } = %» Hevn > j ts of majority of Liberals to the Assembly are in arrears paviny us atonceand with. /P Per i8 written beyond the Ne , ont trouble, the amount of their bills. Toloureflee, The letter from our friend ia it ‘ a ~ }, x’ z } . , —¢ t ? > i . j evotroul, during those years. Suflice it Vhe events of the two short Sessions those only who have paid us regularly) Aberdeen wagsnid to be so much in opt, *¢ o ‘ig ae 2 ‘ . i - ©. tse . P ~ ; YY ‘ shy . . : ea ryt ' ral i - . ta say, that the principal object of ong) hich followed the General, Election, barra liytaken [ee fy Mt eee own style, that Maclean was quite sue. ond the eourse pursued, by Tur Exam- \ ¢ ing ide alimitegd jist 5 SHRUSCTINGELs care—the introduction of Responsible’ who pay with cheerfulness when ealled|'!t wes written by uz—thus shewing wt G wernment—believing as we did, -and| upon, 3s far more safe and:profitable thanjan excellent judge in matters of style Wied. Sais: :,.,.{the remen.brance of the ublic. to need} a errculation of thonsands, which jncludes dn still believe, that to be the one thing a = any whose accounts niust lie over for ta f ‘particujar recital. We have laboured to} 2" “Op tots A st ta ior,” agailt, weed fal, the stepping-stone to every meas vears, aud many more of the great mn. {he © Voice from the Interior,” agai ' : . ° . artre of improvement and reform, the besj4efend on nearly every point the pro | vashed, who never think of the Printer,| benrs, snys Maclean, “strong indications: aom by which the Augean stable of our C°¢¢ings of the House, for they were, i: ;but_ when they take a fancy to send hin of Cuarlottetown,” and suspects itto have, we have ever since toiled asa { encomnier its difficu'ties and perils. Wel iconner ts dificn'ties and peri "\ we shall not be deemed presumptuous in Cannot stop to trace the pragres of events: through "47, 48, and “49, nor revert in de- ti! to any of the services performed for INER In relation to them, are too frest: in lhe man of boasted literary atiainments, - . 7 ; i , ‘ f ms so: " - > . » Government was to be cleansed of its the inal, such as we publicly anticipat ;* impertinent and threatening mes: ASC | on siete by.“ Whelan,” but if not smpurities —suice it te Bry, we repeat, ed wauld have to be adopted, in the ever" | should secident at any time prevent them : a ‘rom receiving th vir papers, P seritten by © Whelan” be observes, he. :