HASZARD'S GAZETTE. JULY 29. court, with no other rsaiark than to request the jar! and the whole entire not to go to the extreme Of the Oh t, hat tosetnenbst till he lied till recently been ateensd asthslr rinad,’ and was once the friend and cherished companies of their fathers. - The Attorney Gene- ral. in behalf of the people, remarked. that he sabtnlt the cause to the jury without any ark. ‘Chlsfhatlce Csndor then charged the jury as follows: Gentlemen of tltejtrry—- My remarks in committing this cause to you will be brief. It cannot be necessary that I &n|d canal to your minds the various counts in the ipdiotment, or the different parts of the very poiltedtestltrreny which has been adduced by the prosecution. As there has been in this case. no vsfernncs to presumptive evidence, it is not need- ful for me to recite to you rules in accordance to which suclr testimony is to be received; and the points of law are all of so familiar a kind, that no instruction will, I think be necdful. All that re- mains for me to de. therefore is to say to you that you are to consider the question, guilty or not guilty, free from all the bias or feeling which, from any peculiar circumstance, may have been likely to have influenced your judgments. You will regard the prisoner simply as an accused in- dividual, standing disconnected with any other individual; and according to law and evidence, you will each of you give your verdict of guilty or not guilty. Firmneas, impartiality and intelli- gence are requisite to the faithful discharge of the large, I wish before I go hence. to apprise the public. that when I am removed, he will be more sadly restrained; his arts will be less successful, and with the same vigilssee. he will be ntuch more easily fitected and subdued than when we were associates. The court was tltert adjourned, and the shsrifi immediately proceeded to execute the sentence, which was done in the reseaee of an immense concourse of spectators, t tough the water seetoed reluctant to receive the criminal, who floated for a considerable time. (Tb be Continued.) GLIAIIIOI IRON PAPERS. T s ant. Sraxsurn or At'srau.——'I‘ho Austri- an accounts of the year 1853 recently published in the oflcisl papers of Vienna, show the re- sults of governing Hungary and Italy by right of conquest, and not by consent and law. The lt;00Ill0 of the Austrian empire amount- ed, according to the oflicial statement. in 1853, £ . ,7 . The chief items are the following :— Dircct trtxe . . . . . £8,472,000 The state domain includin , the income from 8 sequestrnted property 0 refugees 606,7 Salt monopoly . . . . . . 2. 17,8 Tobacco monopoly 2.146.700 Stamps . . . . . . 2,490,600 Custom-house revenue . . . . ,072,800 Excise upon meat, spirits, and wine 2,893,000 Lot! 523 5 duties I now commit to your trust: and you will render your verdict without any regard or refer- ence to consequences ' these remarks, commit the fate of the prisoner to you. The jury, without leaving the jury-box, found the prisoner guilty u n the whole indictment. Whereupon the Chic Justice immediately pro- ceeded to pronounce upoti him the following SEN TEN CE. ALCOHOL, STAND UP! (Here the pri- soner attempted to rise, but was so weak in the knees as to be unable to get up, and the Chief Justice proceeded.) You have been convicted, after a fair and impartial trial, of many high crimes and misdemeanors, whiclt as the whole trial has taken place before the audience who now hear me, it is unnecessary for me to recapitulate. Your criminsiities have been so long continued, so mul- tifariuus. extensive and devastating:you have persevered with so much constancy of pur ose, and subtlety of design through a long life o ini- quity, unredeemed by a single praiseworthy action, that you cannot expect mercy or delay. The sentence of justice, which, as the presiding oflicer in the court of public opinion, Inuw ronounce upon you, is, that you be taken from hence to the place from whence you came, a turn puncheon, then to be cast into the next river, that you may be drowned in cold water. And nu may ie and be forgotten! Mr. Sherifl'. you will see the sentence forthwith executed. Crier adjourn the court. LAST WORDS AND DYING CON- FESSION OF THE PRISONER. The time has at last come, when, by a righte- ous dccision of my country, I am doomed to an ignominious destruction. Before I go hence, and am buried forever in an execrable grave‘, I with with suitable solcmnity to make an humble con- fession of my guilt, and to lift my warning voice against those insidious enemies to the peace attd happiness of man, that captivate his heart whi c they destroy his soul. I acknowledge the truth of the testimony brought against me, the fairness of my trial and the justice of my sentence. It is but deserved retribution, that it should be executed by wit-rrtt, to whom, notwithstanding his spotless innocence, I have ever been an implacable enemy, and have injured in the estimation of thousands, to whom he was friendly. If all the evils which I have propagated in the world, had been enumerated in the indictment against rue, a general confession of their truth would have been snfiicient; but oh, how little did my accusers or the witnesses against me know of the secret machinations in wliichl have been engaged to bring ruin upon the family of man. When I was yet a youth, unknown to the com- munity, in first device was to gain access to the hearts of the multitude, by representing myself as a philantltropist. To this end, I became servant to a pltysiciart. Alas! alas! I am sorry to say, my well meaning patron died m slave. He was so captivated with my insinuating qualities, that he introduced me most extensively, and with high commendation to all his customers, an soon became the admiration of the sick and the well. My popularity was so great, that all my acquaint- ances speedily became my warm friends, and in- deed, in most cases. such was the power of my fascination, they fell deeply in love with me, and felt that was positively indispensable to their happiness. I now entered into a league with sin, and our away was irresistible. By inflaming the passions of men, I destroyed their judgment anti atupified their consciences, so that they at once became weak and wicked. Sometimes they would mourn over the evils I was producing in the com- munity, and bewail my destructive influence among their own friends; but no sooner did they Now, comparing this with the expenditure, which by these returns amounted to £29,360,- I 000 we have a deficit of £5,646,300 or, addin arrears, which have been improperly include in the account, of J.'6.800,000. at is to say, the amount of the dificit rises to full thirty per cent. of the net income. for one of the first items of the expenditure is £2,500,000 for raising the revenue. The rincipal items of expenditure are :— 'l'hc Army. . . . . . . 11,773,000 Interest upon the funded debt 6,082,000 The Home ofiice . . . . 2,030,000 The olice, the secret police included Thai adiiiinistratioir of justice 1,808,000 The Imperial court . 676,000 Public works 1,528 .000 The foreign oflice 186.000 The Audit ofiice . . . 340. Public Instruction and Worship 462.000 These figures are morceloquent than volumes of speeches. The deficit exceeds the interest u n the funded debt. We see, therefore that i Austria should at once declare herself bank- rupt, and repudiate all obligations towards her creditors, she would still remain in an embar- rassed ositiou. But such a state of things is 1 perfect y natural in an em ire where the army I absorbs more than one hal of the whole income [of the State. It one car 1853, the funded idebt has been increas by £6,000,000. This 4 year a new loan has been contracted for £3,- o 0,000. The interest on the funded debt will therefore in the present year exceed the sum of l 7,000,000 or more than one-third of the regu- llar income. The Austrian Government must i therefore go begging to all the money-markets I of Europe, in order, if possible, for some ' months longer to rep up the tottering financial fabric of the empire, which still is misnttmed a great power .’ i The real truth is that as long as Austria . keeps Hungary and Ital only by right of con- |quest, and requires so diers, spies, and the 4 him man to keep down insurrection, her poli- tica importance is imn inary. Should otrr public men persevere eti l in their endeavours to form an intimate alliance between this coun- try and Austria, the people of England must look to their pockets. Austrian bank notes trill not circulate beyond her own frontier, and she has no reserve of bullion. In order that she may afford any ellicient assistance to the allies, she will require enormous sultsirlirxs, as in the late war; when she joined the coufcderacy against Nu olcou, only because as he informed Matter- nich with more truth than politeness, “ Ing- land bid higher than France. “ ‘TURKISH COMMAND!-IRS. Cosrew Pacha, one of the most trusted advi- sers ofthe late and present Sultan, to whom we were indebted for uisn kind oliices. on our first visit to Constantinop e, was a Circassian slave. After filling, in succession, the highest oflicos in the State, up to Scraskier and Ctrirnd Vizicr, he died at it very advanced itge—if is said nearly it hundred. llalil Pnchtt. his |aduptcd son, who rtlso filled the highest olliccs ,in t a State, commenced life as a slave; his ‘ election to the position of son-in-law of Sultan 'Msmma.iid was almost unprecedented oven in ,such a democratic country as Turkey. We "may say the same of ltiztt Pacha, who from being a waiter in a coffee-house, gradually advanced step by step till he also me the son-in-law of the Sultan. It np ears that Halil Pachn, who was the sort 0 Christian parents, was first a slave to it wealthy Armo- s valuable servant of‘ the salts In the hour of . During ' _ _ 1836, we had requent interviews with that time attached to the personal staff of the Seraskier; and his handsome person, gentle- msnly manners. and the fluency with which he spoke German, French, and Italian. impr us with the opinion that he was it singulagliy favourable specimen of an Osiuauli. Itide . we have our miiigivin as to the genuinencss rounded on his very superior intelligence, rind his European style of walking. When we last saw this very extraordinary man, it was in Scopin, in Macedonia, where we with sonte difliculty recognised in the line of the day the unknown aide-dc-camp and secretary of Cosrcvr, the Sersskicr. lie was then preparin , at the head ofa large nrmy, to take the flel against the insitr nt Mnliomuiedans of Albania and Bosnia. t was in quelling the insurrections in Syria and Albania that he first eminently dis- tinguished himself. In Kirdistan ho was equal- ly fortunate ; birt the most important service be rendered the Turkish Government was in sub- duing the revolt of the Boy and Spahis in Bosnia,where, with a very inferior force be triumphed in every engagement. In short. throughout his whole career he has not onl displayed milittiry talents of no common order, but the tact and ability of an enlightened lcgislator.—Ei'cr the friend of the poor rnyali, he became the idol of that ion despised race, and at the same time retaine attachment of the Mosleins. Indeed, since his advent to ow- er, he has done more to allay the differences between the members of‘ the many rival crceds in Turkey than an other man of his day.- Capfain Spmrerlv firing/. The Dunkirk Journal says that a. gentleman passed through that village on route to Cincin- nati, with twelve native Chinese tea culturists. for the purpose of testing the ' ' ' ' growing tea in the vicinity of son run Giuvir.—At Limerick Petty Sessions a Miss Higgins wits summoned by a man named Welsh, for the sum of £2, the balance of an account of £4, for mukirtg u cufiin. The defence set up by Bliss Higgins was, that Welsh was not onl to make the and as he had not yet fulfi led the latter portion of his contract she submitte that ho was not entitled to the sum which he now claimed. Rsroitr or‘ run Bos'ro.~: Coxsrnrrxn Prii'srcr- A.\'S—CIIuI.I1f:A.——Tn the Mayor and Alderman of the (‘fly of Boston; (ietitlcmen,—ln reply to the interrogatories proposed this do by the Mayor to the consulting physicians o the c the uudcraigue beg leave to state That the cholera now exists in Boston, us in most lttrge cities of the United States, but in so limited a degree as not to be considered it neral enide- mic. A careful and torn crate t iet, both in regard to the quantity on quality of food, on avoidance of all excess, es ially in the use of intoxicating drinks, and t o observance ol'cus- tomttr recautions such as have been repeat- edly int icated by this board in former epide- inics,—constitute all that now occurs as neces- sary to be noticed in re rd to the conduct of‘ individuals. The consu ting pliyuiciitns concur in the propriety ofitii clfioient prosecution of active sanitory precautions which are stated to he in progress in the city, and they particularly recommended as ur its possible, the filling of stagnant pools of water with earth, the separation of the poor who reside in over crowded tenements, and especially their removal from cellars which are damp, foul and unwholc- sotno. Geo. Ilaywnrd. Jttcob Bigelow, 7.. B. Adams. Jttmes Ayer, Consulting Pltysiciuns of Boston. Boston, July 12, 1854. e... no 9 3" 6 THE CIIOLERA AT JAMAICA. 'I‘ltc New York Ex recs supplies the fol- llowin from its West ntliii. pa rs:— At glnrtcnguo the public sclizols hitd been lcloscd in consequence of the e idcmic, rind all the children sent home to their pitrcnts. In the district of Manchionel there were ten ;dcaths within a few hours. The re ort front our agony in Oonnhntino la in frightful. f dptitbs ilu tilt: city up to the Iilb 1." d respecting the proposed adntiuion o gist 2 07. n t 8 garrison of St. Aline t be oficers into the Turkish army. Outer was at‘bec ""~l‘ 'of his title to be consi tired a son of Othman,‘ coliin, but to bury her res ectn ly for the £4 : * °”h° FIMIFIIC" Of ll“? “°ll?.hl30‘"'lHR I rests of a man who he felt certain would prove recommends opium, cantphor and peppermint. ln Ba the mortality was equally there were W In Bridgetown of Jtifle was ii 04 deaths. BASZARD'8 GAZETTE. f Saturday, July 29. 1854. ‘present month of July which we have just re- ceived, be ins with an article beaded “The ‘growth rind prospects of British America.“ It ‘was not, we confess, without some anxiety to uncertain what a periodical so celebrated _woiild ubsve to relate concerning our own rtton ritish America, that we rocccded to cut the lonvcs. How great, and, or the moment. how humiliating, was our disap intmcnt when we found that our little Islam was not honored with even a cnsual recognition of being a part ttnd parcel of the country of which the owth and prospects were so fully and so it ly set ‘forth. Canada, Novascotia, New Brunswick, ‘Newfoundland are all dul noticed, cvcn Cape retort, as forming part 0 Nova Scotia is men- tioned und with res ct; Prince Edward Island alone is utiregarde , uutltought of. We are a siiinll—very smnll—bitt still we are (I (‘olony— liitvu it Liotit. Governor, Iicgisluture, Respon- siltlo Goveriiment, and what not, and it was unkind. vcry unkind, in the writer thus to overlook us, just as if we were it little boy or girl not fit to be mentioned in the list of the company. However, it is of no use being vexed an annoyed ubout it, and it is no reason, because strangers think us too insignificant to ‘be noticed, that we should articipatc in the 'l'ccl?~ig “ Send us tiye a go e conceit of our- : scl ”must be OlII' invocation now in order to get rid f thnt despondency which unmerited lcct is so apt to indtico ; not but that there are those who say that we have conceit enough, {and to spare. and that a better and juster 1 knowledge of‘ our own real position and relative iimportance would do much to take the conceit ' out of us, and stimulate us to become in reality lwliat we wish others to believe, and endeavor ito persuade ourselves that we really are. lot-dcr to contribute something toward this f necessary work we will avnil ourselves of some provinces noticed in the article alluded to. rid we do this the more willingly because we would fain sec in the next ccnstis that may be taken in the Island, somctliin ' list of details than those adopted in the last. “'9 have also another reason for directing our readers attention to the growth and im rove- inent of the two udjacent provinces 0 New Brunswick and Nova Scotin, and this is, that the same causes that are at work in those colo- nice in developiii tltt.-ir ntttural resources, are in action here u so, utid that if we are but faithful to ourselves, and throw no obsucles in the way. we iriity in the course ofa short time, rise superior to our present humiliating con- dition. The growing wealth, power, and re- noiii-cca of Cttntitla, have been so often set forth and described, thiit we conceive it is unneces- sary to bring them at the present before our renders: those of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, however, have not been so much und so often alluded to, they, like the Island remained fora long time in the l)tlL'l( ground, and it is not until of Ct)IIIplII‘lliI\‘t.'lgele:I.I(3 years, that tliuir growing iiuportttnce hits .n acknowledged. t—a = The growth of the province New Brunswick in cultivation and population, (although it falls much short ofthnt of Lpper Cunndn, bus been very rapid foracouutry whose soil has to be cleared b the axe. In I840, the quantity of land intprov rind under cultivation was 426,6lI acres. In I851, the quantity was 643,954 itcrcs, showing an increase of 50 per cent. 'I‘he po ulution, in I834, was'1I9,477; in I840, I56,I62; an in ISM, I93,800, although a portion of territor , containing, in I840, 2162 souls, had been code to the United States by the Ashburton 'I‘renty. 'l‘ etotal imports of New Brunswick were. in I849, 3,d67,l435 dollars, and in I850, 4,077,855 dullitrs. Of these itniounts the colony took from (irent Brilnin direct, in I849, l.507,'d-I0 dollars, and iii I8s'i0,l,988,I95 dollars. The exports were. to it countries, in I849, 3,007,310, and in I050, 3,290,090 dollars. To the nrnount of exports, how- ever, wc have to add the value of the ships built in Blackwoods Edinburgh Magasine fpr this ° like a more comprehensive- nian, then to a Turkish Effondi, and afterwards to Crosrew. who,- scctnfi he possessed very su- perior natural talents, ad him educated with touch me than my bcwitching power forced them l again into willing captivity. 'Ihey felt not their danger; they knew not that the poison that drove others to phrenay, was circnlstin in their own eat cafe : and finding) his conduct uniformly veintt;they could not brmade to believe that they l 0d, and as his son, ut, through his wer- were‘ voluntary agents in the work of destruction. - til influence with the Sultan, previtile with Thus I had millions in requisition, who never felt him to bestow upon his Pfofegt the hand 0f M! the cord that bosnd them, and wist not till they _favourito daughter. Cosrcw w s an accurate were beyond hope, that “their strength was de- judge of character. Of this we have another arted." As my influence increased became inltancoln Ollie!‘ Pflcllflt Who lml N90 hold ; I entered the councils of state and produced indebted to him foa much of his success in life. wars; Iwent into armies and stirred up rebellion This gallant nernl. who, up to the present and treason; on board of ships at ses,l caused time, hits mu e the Russians eatmoro dirt thnn revolt and mutiny: in legislative assemblies, vio- . ever they did before in their wars with Tnrkc . Ieitce and discord; in churches, bscltsliding and was not originally it slave, it is true, but u try risy; in families, unnatural alienation and arrived in '1urkcy a friendless refugee. After conjogsliirfldelity ; and poverty,disessc and death gembracing Islauiism, ho was invested by Cos- eeerytclare. it my whoe career, SlN—and you rew, who was nt that time Seraskier, with the all know who is the fatltcr of sirt-—was in inae- rank of ollcer In the Nisam.—Tbe netrating soon disco that the ‘on, and thou Itlo not make this '0 c of his tron hope of jfdlrdon; this I cannot ybung foreigiitr had more nins, talent, and .; , I an sonssionc of not meritiag it; for my enterprise than the major ty of the Moaleni g to use , and read of all teen. to perish in the army, consaueittly, he never h; yeteat new that tay aeeanpllse is still at etalttedsa opportunity of vaaeisg the late- tltc colony, and sold principally in Great Britain. 'rlllG_I)fflnc|ll0l;I)lbG’lfl8flI igltiagely increas|i'ng an the rovrnce,tie tt. ohu‘s ui ere, cs ecitt , avin . ijecently furnished us with some of Ollll’ fincbt clippei ‘hey we“ “en” “°"°_’d"'K l'° I'll“ "“'°“l‘“' of ships. and now possessing it deservedly high reput- tll° l’°‘“‘d ‘Jr l'°3lth- ”{°l'° h“V°_ b°°“ I-9" 01'; ntion. More ntteution is being paid to the finish of fourteen cases. all of which terminal’-edfuttilly. ‘ their productions than romtt.-try; whilst the excellent 78011!!! Will‘!!! I5 IGW l|0|H’l- ‘V9 070 W|Il|0||‘ 3} timber which they possess enables them to secure medical innit, itnd in this awful state God only 5 superior strength and durability. The following was knows what will become of us. No provisions] the number and tonnage of ships bailt in the province - for the r. no collins, no one to superintcnd , in IBM:-— , the burial of the dead. no grave diggers; thus 5% -l0lI_II’I_I. .bodies have been compelled to remain above gllfljplfihl. . , o,md_vv . n row a Flu the lower port of St. Ann‘s parish, the, Journal thinks, the deaths have been tlIII.0 ;equlal in number tolthlosc vlvhich occuarc gni its set visitation. t roan eonppcnrc in t.‘ . . {Tl-°'m in “N F-M '1'?“ it h" been M-1 *0 't?.’.'£’."lt‘2't1t"r'..33.3'33.l‘iti°.?.‘i.i,?i".lI’'’.'t.i.l''ii'..'$'iii'.iZ.'i , 3°'°'“l P°’'°“' '“ “'9 "°'8l'b°l'l‘°°d °f M070“ wick, unleu, perhaps, we except the valley of the ‘ fiév nuvid K8" minim" or ‘he “V0.18 triver Ottawa in Lower Cttnnds. _ To the sturdy _ - _ I _ _ Y3“ labourer, not possessed of capital, it offcrsa bcrrie Mll||0n|I'] 50010‘ t W" 3310118 “'9 Vlcuml N sttd an independent settlement as a laudltolder in St. Anna. Mr. r was one of the oldest return for his labour. 'I‘hs bestwoodtnen are fottn Wesleyan missionaries in Jamaica Island. jto be the Irish. After a year or two of location in ' The disease seems to balls and set at nought this or any other portion of North Alneticlr “I0 3“ the wigdom ‘nd gxpgfioncg of thg IIIIVO Of Ireland II _I'0ll.I'|t'I I0 I30 ‘I llI0'Il VIIIIIIIO f,cu|¢y_ Remediel “mg '6" efimioua in settler. Chan e cfdiet increases his physical pswevs; ‘ that district affords ti. most dcplorali a picture of the state of‘ things. It so s;-— “ Not ti solititréy case line recovered, although 60 ships, 28,628 tons. 2| 5,603 6 I09 'l‘otn|, 88 ships. 34,350 tons. Being mi iiverttge ofttenrly 400 tons to eitch vessel. etc is nti union of our North American stations of New Brunswick are located on the is]. Isles, in :{.".'..'.:'.l‘-."..'.':‘..::..?':".:°':‘."°e.f.'.:'...l'.:.“..,, ' , ns ' to of Ive It MI |. are , _ fill do the assess; . f tbehard g. beftd in the world. Upon the sub terut. Iisltet the toners‘ Iepart. ut,; webs Already,-qnoted.reissarh'— "T Fl‘ bllk t ‘h c3-_ sbollld with - .1. i that the land sniel s of it.‘ It is I ‘z s ‘manure; and while the olfactory senses of the traveller are edb it on the land e seen out at sea immense shoals darkening the asrface of the water." b A rapidly-increasing internal trade is carried on Ilyichihucts. somllolml Pwwduoi St four hundred and fill miles in is will accommodate ipa large steamers for ninst miles, to Fredericton, the seat of government; and small steamers ply farther upward for sixty miles, to the thriving town of Wood- st On all these rivers there is an abundant fall of water. the value of which is ittcalcirlahle to colonist. Every few miles along their banks sntsll ccrnmonitieaare being formed, availing themselves of this power for tnsnsfactaririg and other per sec. First in order generally rises a nwnaill. to operations of the Inrnbcrmsn. car. or. asit is termed in the colonies. sgrist rnill, rlsan nest in order; then a store—awootlota is gessral—s cw dwellings.snd. when a small body of lation has been drawn together. a church or cltsl;l“and a school-house. I-‘tom thceertsnes of I9oI,ws find that there had been estaltliahed in this way through- out the entire province- Ectlblishotests. Number. Hands entployael. flaw-mills, 584 410) Grist-rnills, III Tannerics. I26 I56 Lounderien, [1 ug Breweries, 8 Weaving and card- ing (M75 hand 52 90 come , Other factories, 94 958 Tits difficulties and hardships of n settler’s life, the fear of which deters so many from trying their ortnne in our colonies, are very tnaterislly smoothed down by the rapid formation of these small corn- ninniiies in every eligible site, wherever the forest has fallen before the woodtnsn's axe, and the soil cen brought under cultivation. narration of railwtt routes from St. John's and Mirainichi. by the ai of which the tide of emigration may flow direct to the rovince. must within a very few years, render New rnnswick one of t ' colonies belonging to the British crown. ' Rreionarios or run Exacvrivs Covricir. aso Punr.ic Urrrcsas.—We understand that the Mom- bers of the Executive Council thou t fit some time since, to place the resigns on of‘ their seats at the Board, in the hands of Ilia Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, to be him disposed of when he should see fit ; and on Wednesday last His Excellency notified these gentlemen that he had been pleased toscce of their resignations. On Thursda morning, as soon as this intelligence beuanic nown, the Public Oflicers also tendered the resignation of their oficcs. . It is rumoured that a new Ministry have been formed, and the following Members sworn in : Messrs. Young, Coles. Swsbey, Hsythorne, Hens- ley rind Lord. Ilonbles. Charles Young, President of the Council, Gear e Coles, Colonial Secretary Josep Ilenale , Attorney General, Willitim Swa y, Registrar and Keeper of ans George Bivaie. Postntaner General. Edward Whelan, Queen's Printer. Mr. Warburtort is to be Treasurer, and Mr. Wm. Iflllark, Collector of Excise for Charlottetown. I . as E. -rirn rrrincs: srnwann rsnasn nae-rtsr Itssocia-rioit. Sermons on behalf of the Board of Missions, in connection with this body. were preached on Sunday last, in the Chapel of the First Church. at It o'clock, by the Rev. Wm. Hall, and at half-past six in the evening, by the Rev. John Knox, the Pastor of the Church. 'I‘he Chapel was filled to overflowing on both occasions. The Introductory Sermon was preached by Ilev. C. W. II. Hobbs, on Monday morning, at II. after which the Association was called to order by the Moderator, the Rev. John Knox. . Thirty Delegates from nine Churches in this Island, took their seats as members of the Associ- ation; and I0 other brethcrn were invited to sit in council with them, of whom were visitors from Nova Seotia and New Brunswick. There were 8 or- dained Ministera, 2 Licentiatas, and II Deacons. who took their seats in the Association. Committee were appointed to deliberate on the subjects of Sabbath Schools, Tetnpsrascs. the see of Tobacco, itnd Dornestlc Missions, and the receptions of the ditfcrsnt reports called forth a great deal of interesting and animated discussiop. The Rev. John Knox preached on Monday even- ing, and the Rev. Mr. Burnett on Tuesday, at" o'clock, a. m. After a most harmonious. delightfsl and instructive Session, fall of blessing and of promise, the Associ- d ation was closed with prayer by the moderator. It will meet on the 8d Saturday in July. ID“, in the Brndenell Chapel, Three Rivers, at I o'clock in the afternoon. form" ca." "0 “p,,,,,°m,_.,l M impowm no'_ nnd change o scene rind‘ occupation transforms him a the remcdiu which hue Men into it tptally dtlfercnt lietpg from what lie was whilst --co--«raw med. »~«----.--.-- Fl" =«»-- - :::.*:.‘"‘.:."..*..“,"°"..‘.':.° '::..::, "::.,‘::::"- .,:".:.."?.';"..*.:'. pgn-p.:;t:l'.do::ab;If %::ceex'htI;Mtl'“i£ell;f;‘I?fin:l£ E)I"IlI'lIllllI|. ‘He mayhclipg to l&is|I{oma.n iffiatholliitgiiam, it is is no onger t s )I ote s on o is re one “dV‘n°°d "mm °r cl’°l°“' ‘lib ""'“'k‘bl° priesthood. Pll'II;I ‘VVI|'tl)‘llIVQ visiitied rritish _Arrte- one or the phy-ioign- in St. Ann mom- 3';'.i.s.'Z .il...17T" t'.".';'I...i.."’t'.'l' ..§...'f...°..Z.t""it.l'I I3 mendl mustard emetic. followed by_wur-n_ I_-It soot-...... II inferior to tho ititttttmt in Itllpilttioll to Ind WI§0I':—th0n 10 to 15 grains opitini_. giving the business of a haeltwoodsntan. He is generall the patient abundance of ginger or stint tan. foasd. however. tebetalte bivrrsclf stones. on arrive . - Married. At I-Inst Point on Tuesday the Iltli instant. by the Rev. John Macdens|d,Cruse Iicrls. en. Itnaansl MCEIICIICH, to Jenny, eldest danghtsrof Mr. John McDonald, French Marsh. Same day. It the same, Mr. Andrew Mcliachea. to Miss Jane lsbsnsld, daughter of the late Ilr. An its MacDonald. french Marsh. t eqae on Thursday the 30th July, by the Rev.Robert B. lhttsv-sort, Ilr. Andrew 3. Heat ya. ot'I.ot as. to Ilsa Catharine leill. relist aft late Mr. [ohm Neill. Cflat I0. «gufl finally, s ‘an of gun; o|1,—g|o&.to parsly agricaltaral parasite. The great