~43.’ S GAZET l‘E, MAY 10 lfnblished by Order of the City council. A Law for Sanitary Purposes. [Sancli'oned, ls! May 1856.] Be it enacted by the City Council of the City of Charlottetown: c. l. 'l‘lie City Council shall compose the Board of Health for said City, and three Councillors with the Mayor er presiding Coun- cillor shall be a quorum for the transaction of general business. See. .. The execution of the laws and ordi- nances relating to the suhjectofinternal health shall be under the superintendence of the Cit Marshal and the Police Constables, and it she I be their duty and they and each of them shell have power to enforce all laws, regulations and orders relative to causes of sickness, nuisances and sources of filth existing within the City, except as is otherwise provided in this law subject always to the direction, authority and control of the Mayor and City Council. All privies and vaults shall be so constructed, that the inside of‘ the same shall be at least two feet distant from the line of every adjoining lot, unless the owner of said adjoining lot should otherwise agree and con- sent, so also from every street, lane, s uare, or public place, or private passage-way. very vault shal be made tight, so that the contents thereof shall not escape therefrom. Sc ' he owner, agent, occupant or other rson havin the care of a dwelling-house, or any other building with which there ought to he a priv connected, shall furnish such tene- ment wit a proper and sufficient privy, the vault of which shall sunk under ground and built in the manner herein-before pre- scribed, and of a capaeit proportionate to the number ofinhabitants e such tenement, or of those having occasion to use such priv :and such owner or other person as aforesai , wlie- ther he be an inhabitant of the City or not, who after having received written notice from the Mayor and Board of Health, shall, within such time as they may appoint, refuse or neg ect to cause a suitable privy and vault to be constructed, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding five pounds for each and ever da alter the time specified in such notice tilfsuc privy and vault be constructed; and the Me or and Board of Health are hereby empowers to cause such privy and vault to be made for such tenement, the expense of which shall be paid by the owner or other person as aforesaid. Sec. 5. In cases where rivies and vaults which may be constructed, s all be for the use of more than one house or tenement, then the owner or other person as aforesaid shall be liable to pay a proportionate part of the expense thereof. Sec. 6 When any privy and vault shall fall into decay, become offensive or a nuisance, the owner or other erson as aforesaid shall cause the same to e moved, altered, cleansed, amended or repaired within such reasonable time as the Mayor and Board of Health shall direct. and in case of refusal or neglect for five days after, written notice from the Mayor and Board of Health or City Marshal. shall have been served, to have the same moved. altered, cleansed, amended or repaired, the owner or other person as aforesaid so notified, and neglectin or refusing. shall be liable to a sum not excee ing ten shillings for each and every day said privy and vault shall remain unat'- tended to as required. See. Vhcnover upon due examination it shall appear to the Mayor and Board of Health that the number of persons occupying any tene- ment or building in the City is so great as to be the cause of’ nuisance, sickness and the source of filth, or that any tenements or build- ings uro not furnislicd with privies and vaults constructed according to the provisions of this law, they may thereupon give notice in writing to such persons or any of’ them to move from and quit such tenement or building within such time as the Mayor and Boiirdof llcalth shall deem reasonable, and if any person or persons so notified shall neglect or refuse to move from and quit such tenement or building within the time mentioned in such notice, the Mayor and Board of Health are hereby autho- rised and empowered thereupon forcibly to remove them, and such person or persons shall further be liable to a enalty not exceeding five pounds for such neg act or refusal. Sec. 8. Darin the time in each car be- tween the first o May and the thirty first of October, both inclusive, privy vaults may be em tied, and then only within such hours and such manner as hereinafter prescribed, that is as persons who em ty or cleanse rivy 0 so during e hours of e even at, and four o'clock the following morni and ' ' i duripg the time tween the first of ovember, a thirtieth of April, both inclusive, the hours shall be tween nine o'clock at night and six o'clock the followin mornin , and convey the contents thereof in" such tig t and properly covered carts or vehi- cles as shall not permit the stench thereof, or any portion of the said contents to esca ; and any persons who wilfully slope or spills an such olensive matter in the removal thereo , or who does sec carefully swee and cleanse e every place in which any such o sasive matter y : all vaults, must ii o'clock at nig ‘ for each and every such neglect or refusal. llASZAi‘ti1’§ has been placed. or unavoidably slo ed or spilled, shall be liable to a penalty notpdfxcecd. ing forty shillings for each offence; and in default of the apprehension of the actual °i7°Dd°|'y the driver or person having the care of the cart or vehicle employed for such purpose shall be deemed to be the offender; and unyl person_ who empties or causes to be emptied any pi-_ivy vault in any other hours than herein prescribed, shall for sit a sum not exceeding five pounds for each and every offence. _ 0- dirt, saw-dust, soot, ashes, oinders, shavings, hair, manure, oyster, clam or lobster shells, waste water, animal u- vege- table substances, rubbish or filth of any kind in any hou§e,_warehouse, cellar, yard or other lace within the city which the Mayor and oard of Health deems injurious to the health of the city, shall be roinoved by the owner or occupant of such liouso or other place as aforesaid within twenty-four hours, or such other time as the Mayor and Board of Health shall deem reasonable, and after notice in writing to that effect served personally upon the owner or occupant or posted on the premi- ses, if he or they shall neglect or refuse to remove the same, then such removal shall be made under the direction of the Mayorand Board of Health, and the expense thereof shall be borne by such owner or occupant and in addi- tion thereto, shall be subject to a penalty not exeeedling sixty shillings for every neglect or use . Sec. 10. If the manure or soil of any stable or other collection of refuse matter be allowed to accumulate till it becomes offensive, the owner thereof or the person on whose premises the same ma he, shall, within twenty-four hours after being notified remove the same or cause it to be removed, and on neglecting or refusing so to do, the owner of such manure, soil or refuse matter, or the erson on whose premises the same may he, she l be subject to a fine not exceeding forty shillings for each and ever day such manure, soil or refuse matter shal remain unremoved. See. at any time a physician shall certify under his hand that the accumulation of any manure, soil, filth, stagnant, water, privies or other noxious or oflensive matter in the City ought to be removed as being injurious to the health of the inhabitants. the owner thereof or the person’ on whose premises the same may he, shall be notified to remove the same forthwith, and if the owner or person on whose premises the same may be, neglects or rcfuscs for the space of twenty-four hours after receipt of such notice to remove such injurious matter, he or they shall be subject to pay a fine not exceeding five pounds for eac hand every day the same shall remain nnmove ; and such ‘I O "I the content. of any privy to owmow 0, gunk to be forthwith removed at the cost and char thcrefroin to the annoyance of the occupiers of of the offender or offenders in addition to t O the adjoining property, shall for every such offence forfeit and pay a sum not exceeding forty shillings, and a further line not exceediiig five shillings for each and every day during which such nuisance continues ; and the Mayor and Board of health may cause to be drained, or cleansed out any stagnant pools, ditches, or ponds of water, or abate any such nuisance as aforesaid, and for that purpose may enter by their ofliccrs and workmen into and upon any premises within the City at all reasonable times, and do all necessary acts for the pur- poses aforcsaid and the expenses incurred thereby shall be paid by the person committing such offence or occupying the rcmises whence such annoyance proceeds, an if there be no occupier, by the owner of such premises, and shall be recoverable as damages in the Mayor's or Police Court unless the amount thereof shall eexeed ten pounds. Sec . Persons keeping any swine or pigs within the City, shall not permit the same to become a nuisance through dirt and filth, but shall at all times keep their styes or places where such pigs are kept clean and wholesome under a penalty of not more than twenty shil- lings for each and every offence; and persons keeping pigs shall not permit any manure or oil from the same to remain in the neighbor- hood of such pigs till it becomes offensive and a nuisance under a penalty of twent shillings for each and every day such shal continue after notice to remove the same: and persons keeping pigs shall not be permitted to erect the styes or inclosures for such pigs, or place any manure or offal from the same against the dwellin , or in the immediate neighborhood of the dwe ling of their nearest neighbors, under a penalty not exceedin five pounds for such erection or placing sue manure or offal, and a further peniilty not over forty shillings for each and every day sue stye, manure or offs mains after notice from the City Marshal to remove the same. Sec. 17. Every person who shall kee any pig-stye on the front of on street, not ein shut out from such street b a sufliciently close wall or fence, or who shal eep any swine in or near any street so as to be a nuisance, and on being notified to remove such pig-styc re- fuses or neglects to do so, shall be liable to a penalty not exceeding twenty shillings l'or eac and every day the same shall remain after the receipt of such notice. 18. lfon complaint upon oath of any credible person, or in view of the Mavor any member of the Board of health, the City hier- shal or any of the police constables, it shall be ascertained that any fish, meat, potatoes, cab- ‘I 6 i injurious matter shall be removed at the direc- tion of the Mayor and Board of health, at the expense of such owner or person on whose rcmises the same may be over and above the no and costs therefor. Sec. 12. 'l‘hore shall be no accumulation of nianuro or filth of any description in or about any slaughter-houses or yards connected there- with within the City. and all such slaughter- houscs and yards shall be kept clean at all times by the respective owners or occupiers thereof, and any person guilty of accumulating any such manure or filth or neglecting or re- fusing to keep such slaughter-houses and yards connected therewith clean, thall forfeit asuni not exceeding five pounds and in addition, shall is subject to a penalty not exceeding twenty shillings for each and every day such mnniire or liltli shall remain or such slaughter-house or yard connected therewith continues unclcanscd 3 the finest foulard hitherto mode. ‘ penalty. I bee. 21. _In the event of breaches of this law when imprisonment has to be resorted to. the ,period shall not be less than five days, nor more than sixty days. _ Roar. llu-rcniivson, Mayor. William B. Wellner, City Clerk. March 7th, 1856. SILK ssour 'ro SUP!-JRSEDR C0'l"f‘ON-- PEBHAPS !—We hall with delight the an- nouncement, that a savant has just made so valuable a discovery in the art of pre- paring silk, that this article will become cheaper and more common than cotton. This savanl, it appears, one day having nothing else to do, began to think, which is wonderful for a savant, says Alphonse Knrr—tliat there was but one creature capable of producing silk—that there was but one description of vegetable mat- ter, that of the mulberry tree, fitted for the creature's food, therefore the silk substance must he not in the ammo, but in the vegetable matter; so at once the mean! set about (“What! eating inulberries’! interrupted the gumin Prince Napoleon, when the story was told in the Tuileries. He was rebuked by a regard superieur, and the story went oii)—ilie sat-ant set about anal zing the composition of the mulberry leaf? an by boiling it to a thick paste has pro- duced every description of silk in im- meiice quantities. I have seen several yards of it manu- factured, and although wanting a little of the gloss belonging to that spun by the worm, I can pronounce it far superior to The price of the silk is five francs a pound when spun, being 120 francs cheaper than that of the present day. This new method of procuring silk will at once he adopted in all countries, as the mulberry can be grown in any pountry, and re- quires scarcely any culture. The cul-_ tivation of this new branch of industry will do away entirely with that of cotton. -—Paris Corr. London /lllas. bages, onions, turnips or any other in any cellar, warehouse, stable, euthouse or other premises are decomposing and becoming a nuisance or injurious to health, the same shall be ordered to be immediately removed without the City, and if the owner or person in whose premises the same may he, shall neglect or re- use to remove the same when so ordered, the l\layor and Board of health‘ shall have power at all reasonable times to send their ollicers into or upon such premises and remove such decomposing or injurious substances at the cost and charge of the owner or person aforesaid, and such owiicr or other person in addition shall be liable to a fine not exceeding ten poun s. Sec. 19. [fen complaint on oath efany cro- dible witness, or on view of the Mayor, any of the members of the Board of health, the City Marshal, or an of the police constables it shall he discoi cred that any person is guilty of after notice being given to remove such manure or liltli or clean such slaughter-liouse or yard. 5%! 13. Should ii Pliysicinii certify that any house, or art of a house or building within the City isp in such a filthy or unwholesonie condition that the licnlth of the inmates or of the neighbors is thereby all}.-cteil or endangered or that the limowashing, cleansing and purify- ‘".*= °“:.;". '".‘.":° °' "“"3‘"‘ii‘:.‘{£‘l.¥“§&J32'§; o wou en 0 preven or I - c contagious disease, the Mayor and Boprd olf health ma order the occu ier or owner 0 "sue 1 house, orypart thereof, lg limewnsh, cleanse and pudrify the snipe, an: if ltlieflciceuplipr or owner 0 not com ) wit suci 0 er I. ey or either of them she I e subject to a perialty not exceeding ten shillings for every day's neglect thereof. d Sec. 14. The Board of healthh when they eeni it nccessar ma uire t e owner or occu nt of everyyilwelfinlge-(liouse,_ or part of a dlwel iipg-house or building, torlimplwipsh and c can t eir res ctivc ortions o sue ouse or building and ‘tho privpy connected therewith; and every owner or occupant as aforesaid ne- glecting or refusing fl:‘c0l1lpl{Wt'Cl; suchrrequiii sltion on conviction t ereo , y in orma ion 0 the police or any other credible witness, shall be subject to a fine not exceeding ten shillings No person shall suffer any waste or stagnant water to remain in any cellar_or within an rcmises belonging to or occupied by him within the City so as to be a nuisance. and every rson who suflcrs any such water to remain for fort -eight hours after receiving having; lllll nr kvpt an} dc-nil horse, neat cattle, pig, «log, poi:lti~_\-. or my other niiimnl in an stable, store, \v:.rcliou.n;, or other building, or within any yard or other enclosure within the Cit till the same shall have become oflensive an a nuisance, and whoshall refuse or neglect to remove or bury the same, when called upon to do so, the Mayo!‘ and Board of health shall herewith have power at all reasonable times to send their officers into any such building or enclosure as aforesaid, take tlicrcfroin said ollcnsive animal and bury or destroy the some at the cost of the person having hid or kept the same, or the person on whose pre- mises the sanie may be found, and said person or persons shall in addition be subject to a fine not exceeding ten pounds for each and every ollenec. See. 20. No person or persons shall throw, put, deposit, or place, or_cause to be thrown, put, deposited, or plaeed_in the creek generally called " the Governor's Fish Pond,” or any part thereof an dirt, filth, ofials, garbage, or other offensive parts of animals or any rotten or ofiensive meat, fish or vegetables, or the ear- casc of any dead animal, or any other rotten or ofi'ensive substance under a penalty not exceed- ing five pounds; and an person having done or caused to be cominitt an nuisance in the pond or premises nforesai , shall neglect or refuse to remove the some forthwith, when ordered or directed by the Mayor and Board of llealth or City Marshal, shall for every offence for-foit and p:iy a sum not exceeding twenty shillings, and in case of refusal or neglect to comply with such order, then the Mayor and notice from the D ayor and Board of health to remove the same, and every person who allows Board of Health shall order the said nuisance PROP.-\GA'I‘lONs or Tnoucs'r.—Who shall say at what point in the stream of time the personal character of any individual new on the earth shall cease toinllueiice? A sentiment, a habit offeeling once com- municated to another mind is gone ; it is beyond rccal ; it bore the stamp of virtue ; it is blessing man, and owned by Heaven; its character was evil; vain the remorse flint would revoke it; vain ihc gnawing anxiety flint would compute its mischief; its immediate, and to us visible, effect may soon be spent; its re- mote one, who shall calculate ‘.1 The oak which waves in our forest to day, owes its form, its species, and its tint to the acorn which dropped from its an- cestors, under whose shades Druids worshipped. “Hllmflll life extends be- yond the ihrcescorc years and ten which bound its visible existence here.” The spirit is removed into another region, the body is forgotten upon earth; but living and working still is the influence gene- rated by the moral feature of him who has so long since passed away.—Thc characters of the dead are wrought into those of the living ; the generation below the sod formed that which now dwells and acts upon earth, the existing gener- ation is moulding that which succ it, and distant posterity shall inherit the characteristics which we infuse into our children to-day.— The Parents’ High Commission. 0 I Messrs. Bernard and Hy. Calneck, of ‘Granville, N. S. have sold two yoke of Oxen a short time since for £l35 10s. But a late St. John paper states that a pair of Cornwallis cattle brought in that city, a day or two previous, the sum of £66 life. The latter were raised by Mr. John M. Bill. of Billtown, Cornwallis, weighed 2,335 lbs, and turned out 350 weight of rough inflow. §J:?'I‘he Canadian Parliament has de- cided, that the permanent seat of Govern- ment shall henceforth he at Quebec.