EASZARE’ Ll'ABl.ll.l.EB;S° JCEJBMAL, AME CCMMEBCIIAE AEVEBEISEB. Established 1823. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Saturday, January 13, 1855. GAZETTE. New Series. 'No. 205. Eu.szard’s Gazette- , Q,uccuSt'nse.P. E.Isla_ud. 1-‘..,._A..,..| sghga-ighu.l5s. Discount for cash in advance. - tllll or arsvlurisslu. ‘ ' , ’ D s a..iIJa1'£‘.§.'i'.i.‘T3o"ia1..°,_°z."E.'£it?:.."T'i'.Lizii:.'t Is. s.i.—isiiaes,.i..-at uses. 4-. 6«I-—15 |--r--.5_--- Illliuss. be. 6-I.—I|i til. fiirepch addttioae line. One fourth of the above forcsch coutinunce._ A," - ' ' " ' ' -illbacoutiunerl fltilforbid. J THOMAS DOUGIIABB, 5.r'1..sr1' srnssr. NEW YORK. Importer sud Des_Ier in every_ description of Foreign and Domestic H A B. D W A R E , rsuavr ununisii cocoa in ‘nu: racuaou. sou accrr roe Bee's Braces, Tut-nsorcws, dio. IA NUPACTUIII Of the Premium steel squares, Premium Angers and mu, Axes, Soc at and Pirates Chisels, Patent H ollow A . 56- Agsst for Burlington Wagon Atla- Davru Kisusuaun. & Co.. Ilnyfeellflfn Iluliugssu, V S. L. TILLEY, Wholesale and Retail Drugglst 15, nrno eraser, 8.lI.N'1' JOEV. JV. 3. been printu-‘l for a firm in New copies :i.iv.: been retained for Sale in this Island. It is an interesting and entertaining work, as tlge following extract from the preface will e states, that it is not unl indeed almost devoid c any fictitious admixture uh..- ever, he would not be understood to assert, that the events of the narrative occurred exactly in the order and connexion in which they are related. and befel the members of exactly each a family as is here due- cribed. llud this been the case, the production would have been merely a biographical treatise, with the Books Just Published. The Spelling Book Superseded. A new and easy way of tsachin the spelling, meaning, and pronunciation of all 'fli'cult words in the English Language, with exercises on verbal dis- tiuctlona, By ROBERT SULLIVAN, L. L. D. g- The above work has been tinted "pri; cipslly for s firm in New Brunswick, a stir copies are for Sale in this Island. Price Is 3d. THE M|NlSTER’S FAMILY, or run Rev. W. M. HEPHERINGTON. aurnoit or A HISTORY OF THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND. Q‘ The show Book of 304 pages, has just ork, a few w :— “ When the Author of the following little work "founded on facts," but is IDILLII II IIITISH AND FOREIGN DRUGS, CIIIIICALI, Patent Iledicises, Perfumery, Soaps. Spiel. l_’-i-I-. Ole, Glam. Putty. Varnish, 316-. 0¢||l|¢l-|°|l ingrea . ‘III variety NEW FIRM. %IGB 1‘. IIASZARD. woeldrupectlh hthnste that he has taken into real parties thinly veiled under fictitious names. Such is not its nature; and yet there is not a character, attempted to be drawn, nor an event of any importance narrated, which is not an asset transcri t of some character or event that occurred within t a range of the Author's own knowledge. At the same tiru it is hoped that the work contains nothing which, even were it divulged, could in the slightest degree prove ofl'esslve or psiiiful to any person to whom it may be cos‘ tured to refer. st, while both facts and feelings are, in a very drict sense, true, the names of persons and pieces are THE BATTLE OF BALAC LAVA. C I I I 0 Each horseman drew hie battle blade, And furious cvery charger neighed ojoin the dreadful revelr . Then shook the hills with thttn er riveu, Then rushed the steed to battle driven, And louder than the bolts of heaven l"sr flashed the rod artillery. The combat deepens. On ye brave, Who rush to glory or the grave: I O C I I-‘ew. few shall part where many meet! The snow shall be their winding-sheet, And every turf beneath their feet, Shall be it soldier’s sepulchre. Had Campbell stood upon the heights, watch- ing the fearful tournament. when, in the face of an army of infantry, artillery, and cavalry, our gallant Light Brigade, knowing their doom, charged to certain dcntli, were determined to die hard, he could not better have described the fatal combat of Balaclava. There, making up, steady as on parade, rode beardless bo s, " mothers’ curled darlings,” side by side with the brown, bearded heroes of Indian warfare-— Moodkee, Aliwal, and Sohraon: and, though the shell and shot of cross-batteries tore hu c ps in their tilos,_n.nd it hailstorm of ride bu — eta emptT-::'l man a saddle, no unwoundcd man—private sol ier or otlicer—checked his rapid, steady pace, or swerved to right or left. On strai ht they rode, a handful of heroes, and sabred all before them. Lord Cardigan leaped the parapets before the Russian guns, as coolly as he would an ox-fence in Northamptonshire. Then followed the moment of the fearful melee, which our Artist has seizcd—the gunners were out down at their guns—the opposing lines “ broken, beaten, driven all adrif ." But there is a limit to everything—horses are blown, men tired out, squadrons scattered. Then was the moment for reserves to have fallen on the dis- comlltod enemy ; but, alas! we had no reserves. Au Hussar writes-—“I turned to look for re- serves, my heart sunk—thcro was nothing but our thin second line.” has been more fortunate. The zoua_Vc hell made a hole in the earth to conceal himself, and watched for the appearance of the otlicer. Tho fiirst day be tired in rain, but next day one of his balls stfttck the Rusian, who fell dead on his gun. Progress of the War. SIBGE OF SEBASTOPOL. The Times’ corcspondent informs us from the camp, under date Nov. 25, that I50 siege has been for many days practically suspended, that our batteries are used up and silent, and that our army are much exhausted by the effects of excessive labour and watching, and by the wet and storm to which they have been so incessantly expo- sed:— Till wuarnsu. “It is now pouring rain—the skies are black as ink—the wind is howling over the staggering tents—the trenches are turned into dykes—in the tents the water is some- times ti foot decp—our men have not either warm or waterproof clothing—they are out for twelve hours at ti time in the trenches- they are plunged into the inevitable mise- ries of ti winter cempaign—snd not a soul seems to cure for their comfort, or even for their lives. These are hard truths—but the people of England must hear them. They must know, that the wretched bog ar who wonders about the streets of Lon on in the rain leads the life of a prince com- pared with the British soldiers who are ti hting out here for their country, and win, we are complsccntly assured by the home authorities, are the best appointed army in Europe. They are well fed, in- deed. but they have no shelter, no rest, and no defence against the weather. The run souiisas’ siitnaiun, Again on the 27th : " Although the men are only let! for 12 hours in the trenches at a spell, they suffer considerably from the effects of cold, wet, and expoauro. The revalent diseases are fever, dysentry and iarrhaza, and in the light division, on which a large share of the labour of the ''_'m}’ “ill. I ere were 350 men on the sick list a day or two a o. The men's cloth's are tattered, and t resdbsre and are not lit to resist rain or cold. On dil that all the men will be hutted by the 15th of the month, and 15,000 planks have been or- dered up to Balsklsva, for the urpose of constructing sheds and huts. he Fire- brsnd, Stromboli, and other vessels have already arrived with stores of wood for that purpose. "The new battery, the guns of which will he worked principally by sailors, is finished, and it only remains to pierce the psrspcts with cmbrasures. It is sjleclic, and will cositsiu26 icccs of very heavy metal. The right si eof the flscltc com- munk the Inksrnian road and battery; the lell aide sweeps the head of lnkermsu Creek, and commands the shipping, which will be driven down tows s k ard Creek. The position of this battery is on a knoll to the right, and in advance of our Lancaster and68 pounder battery, which stands on the extreme right and in the rear of the right attack. Why was not it made before? “The 9th regiment, which has juu arrived, has been ordered to remain in quarters and under canvass near the town. I have had a. look" at the Russians on the hills, and assuredly there is no sign of their moving. They could not get a single gnn down the hill or along the valley, their cavalr would be utterly useless in such Then, hot and bleeding, and covered with the groun , their infantry are spread over the liitaationall and entirely liclitions in ever instance blood of enemies, the remnant, keeping close to but one. ' he name here referred to is t at of her the in- tents, so long exposed to the blaze of a . . 5;;-Mir Ilr. George W. Owen. The Printing, selling ulgarisn sun, and now continually drench- sndstatsonerybssisees orscsrriedonhyhim gin rrom’:lia lprt of January next. he conducted the IT— Esszard and Owen. Ilr. lla&sd will at't‘ce‘di I3: ' Pria' departuient,s _ r. eno_ - By with increased Cspnel. they hope espechlly to merit the patronage ofthe Public. BRASS FOUNDRY. am) aracrnzsn snor. BY 37. . R038. N°.."._..""o(l' ..,,.m°.~:.+-.E*.:-.-';..:-..':-:.': lay 1:: I JOHN T. THOMAS ‘WILL be ob!‘ to all possess ' tehiru, (by Nora Head. or Book Debt). by an im- msdiae settlement. M . BB Isilsf the aeighbourig Pi-oviscasandthe United sir... will be msde_ap and forwarded, on and alter the lat ofJaausy, vm Cape _'I‘ravsrss Ith.9Ih. lblh 'l‘fl0lfA8 owmt. General Post Ofics. Postmaster General. December 28, I854. CARD. ltoysl H‘ house the Princess Auous-ra, in cidsut re ted in the last part of chapter 8. The ncideut occurred racisel as there related ; and the Author thought it no to t s Illustrious Led to record a specimen of that frankness. bsuevo once, and kindl considerate attention to all around her, by whic her Royal Highness is distinguished. Having in this one instance withdrawn the veil, he avows it, and states the rsssou,-—hoping also to preclude the inference, that what remains more concealed may on that account be considered the less real. Where he has not withdrawn it, he treats it will he allowed to red ;-and believes that any attempt further to withdraw it, will prove inelfectual, as not even the disco texture of that curtain whic over his truthful tale,-—or involve such an application of it to individuals as might injure the feelings of the most sensitiv . very of the writer would necessarily unravel the hehsscli osen to draw Price bound in Cloth, HASZARD & OWEN Queen Square. Just Published , TH E PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ihdalfidflddl, FOR 1855. Containing the present Government of the British American Colonies, Imports, po of this Island, and all the usual lists of Coons, Ms- giaratss, Commissioners, us and Revenue c., ho. GEO. T. HASZARD, Queen's Square. BOISE IIEEI, Juan, respectfully leaders his sincere thanks to his uumcroes friends and cu- tomers, for ' geeeress pats dusiugtlse last 13 years, and by I . . and Ahll-ZILICAN GOODS. and y taken his Son. Guoaou I. in business. which will be the same and Erin of H B E E‘: d- 8 O ..V'. They won hope t by constant attention to hubs-’.the keepiagu good assortment ofsuch goods I are Iugeuerul ruqueu, and by charging the no.1 modcate prices. is continue to merit sad receive a toGesvge Ieer,y'su., urn res. indebted pectf seated t settle their Aeese i . CbrL':owu. Jed. let. I865. (All Int) NOTICE. ‘lathe lmelfempesusoe ofthislislsad. HAV III} matters of much importance connected avhhthe audwallbeiugefeurcsusete Iaybehsuibs eadfieerderrbettbeeesst ' may be the more full diseased. I Eng s eenvflhs sf ulfrhe Divisisas sash uty. Itbessfsversqsesttbstthseicssssud samsuyof the mssubess of the diiuut Divisions is Prisca County as can possibly uitead, will assemble at De- Isxsfiou Tuesday. the lush ' ut.st §o'clock p. in. these in King's County, at Georgetown on ‘rs-say nu 30th. I. T. PIDWELL. G. W. P. Charlottetown, I’. I1. Island. let January, I855. Ll. sous hsvi l sl demands inst the hts't.:oI‘ \Vis.i.‘i‘asse'Coarus. Esq": late of ' I. fleuusfe, d mms for adjustment to 1 hdfied to themidfistste are rsquestedto Fyhfl bibsfuh. A|.II'.I1' ll. C0.\IP'l0N, Executor. . are requested to furnish the the Subscriber, and all per- niuks ‘n.""" D" “'5' I3“ Essences, L on's Kstheiron for the hair, Perry's Hssgsriss Iialrn for the hair, French Oil, Mexican Wn"‘3A3 Cfllill I800“ 50" 500! 13'" Mustang Liuimsnt, Honey. Losenges. die. bwutseu upon my Leeds. and 5|" 0|? ' P. S. The Subscriber thashs those persons whi """“3Cs -550" UNI“ WC I0- have patrouisd his Shop for the last twelve ears, the all having so ~&ll, hslsu er, so trustee, ' s M fl IO U. fiiias-.-I-su.o...n." "' and and colon Groe de Naples, Persians. Prints, Irish Linen, Flannels, Factory and white Cot- tons. coloured and white Psstebosrd. l.udies' I-‘er Ca cashmere and kid Gent's Satin stocks, Minted Crsvats and Msflers. Ladies’ llrooches. Finger Rings, Guards, side and back Combs, rimming de., buttons, needles, pins, hooks and rye», ilimnls, tapes, sewing Letter Paper. wnf--rs, steal peas and handles, piss. Mans I-‘iii Cape, Kossuili and other Hen. to. So Starch: llaisins, Currants, Rice. Mustard. Pepper. Alspice, lteusted Coflbe, Chocolate, Cocos and Oil. Dye Woods, Alum, Copperes, Sago, Ar- sowroot, Banhsnwere. Cigars, Pipes, &c. psorn Salts, Peruvian Burk. Cream Tartar, Moll'att‘s Pills, Hol- loway's Pills and Ointment, Dr, Klddsr‘s Pills, I-‘uhnsstock‘s, Comstocli's, Curtis and Perkins’ and Dr. Mcl.ane's Vermifage, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, Avery, Brown & Co's. celebrated Cot: Lozenges, Dsvine's Compound do., Dr. Townes Sarsaparills, Curtis and Pevkin's Pain Killer and Wild Cherry Bitten, B-iar_'s Grease, Hair 0il,aesorted and hope for a continuance of their favors. Per Rapid, Abigail, AND o'rtts:it srririturvrs, tit: Subscriber has ws'r RECEIVED his FALL STOCK, which he will sell low for at his new store, “IJONDON HOUSE," 19. DR Y GOODS. Black and Coloured Broad and Pilot Cloths, plain faae ins, Csssimeres and Vestiugs, plain and printed Orleans, Alpaecss. De- (40DrI.):f‘I. coloured and Black _VsIvsia. blsslr W War , Bonnet She . , Irons and Victoriii:, figured hluslius, eta, Laces, Edgings, and Iain and ‘lands, Artificial Flowers, Cup Fronts, ric and Iain red Bonnet and cap Ribbons, Lsdissrfur, ' Glues. silk and worsted Braids, cotton ; heir GROCERIES. Molasses, Tobacco, Soap, Indigo, 'l'es Leather, Vinegar, , corn Brooms, Buckets, Nails, Glass, Paint .1 Large Lot of Msdictnu, Prrfasisry. dc. ltliubsrb. Cslomel, Laudsnum, B ndisu Dyspepsia Pills. Dr. McI.ane's Liver Pills, ‘hose r.-one whosesocounts have been aairnuaan ‘rate each, will oblige by an early settlement. their ollicers, fou ht their way back, only saved from total annihi stion b the desperate charge a a one of the Itusoian tteries made by the C assours d'Afriquo. And so, in a purposeless attack, our Light Cavalry Brigade was destroyed, thus alfording one more instance of the mistake to which English cavalry oliicers have always been prone -—attempting too much. To attack an enemy of superior force, in the three arms, unbroken by previous tire of artil- lery, is against the first rules of cavalrv sorties; to attempt such it charge without an 'cient re- serves, in the presence of an enemy superior in csvalry—shoer folly. But to fully appreciate the determined valour of the heroes 0 Balaclava, our non-militnr readers must understand, that a charge over a. distance of ti mile and a quarter is ncta mad gallop at full speed, in which every horseman rides as hard as he can ; that would be merely running away toward the enemy. The charge is a measured paco——trot, cantor, gallop; the gallop timed by the commanding oficer, so as not to outpace the slowest horse in the Brigade, and kee all in hand, until the last hundred paces, an then to fall in a com- paot, irresistible body on the enemy's line. The severe lesson and loss we have oxperien- cod from the want and the misusage of cavalry in the Crimea should not, however, dishoarten us, but rather direct our attention to the ex- cellent raw material we possess-—material in ever way superior to that of any countr in the wor d, if we can get rid of Contineuta imita- tions, and the legacies of frippery left us by George IV., and his dandy Hussars. Cavalry “ ought to be at once the cye,the feeler, and the feeder ofthe army.” It reaps the fruit of victory, covers a retreat. and retrieves a disaster. Cavalry consists of Heavy Cavalry, Dragoons, and Light Cavalry. Heavy Cavalry, composed of large men mounted on heavy powerful horses, are held in hand for decisive charges on the day of battle, and than horses are so overwei htsd, that they require Light Cavalry to fol ow up the enemy I they avo beaten. The greatest posstblp care is taken 0 Heavy Cavalry in tho field. 'Ihey do no outpost duty, no foraging, no rcconnoitring ; they can- not be made use of even to escort a convoy, be- cause, if kept out long on the rond,_thcir horses fall ofl'in condition and become incapable of can ing their riders. Dragoons were ori- iually intended to be infantry z-is-tinted on orscs. In our service, they are divided into light and heavy, the heavy being brigsded with the household troops when in tho held. Light Cavalry are required to watch over the safety of the army. h0W|’lntt °"_ El‘? “Ml” “d in the rear, to prevent all possibility ofa sur- priso. In open country they push on, and keep the enemy at a proper distiinco Having the command of swift and powerful horses, we destroy their speed and endurance b placing giants upon them. The ofiiict ofa c urge depends more on the swiftncsa and freshness of the horses than on their weight. Velocity makes weight. Fashion has led us to put our Grenadiers upon horseback. The [lun- rian Hussnrs, the Polish Lancers, and the Chasseurs d‘Afrique are ten-stono men, and the two former have repeatedly ridden down lieav Cuirassiers. The efliciency of the latter is we I known. Tits Routine ann ‘run Zouvta.—lt was some time ago stated in the papers that an old Russian naval officer at Se- hastopol, hud.i cannon brought into the street by his servants, and smuseu himself by firing at the hesicgers. From time to time the Francs Tireurs picked of the ser- vants. but they were daily renewed by others, and every attempt of the best marksman in hit the old ollicer had failed. The ‘ Prcsse’ now ublishes a letter from ed by torrents of rain, let the wet through ‘like sieves,’ and are perfectly useless as protections against the weather. A hund- red military ‘0felli’ will send home word of this to England, and it is now impossible for any English general to control the correspondence of oflicers and men un- der his command, though in despotic coun- tries the censorship of the press ms succeed in restricting to the terrified hear-tlis and homes of families the depressing and anxious influence of letters from the seat of we r. “ It will be quite useless to send out more cavalry here at present. The horses ofthe small force already out here are in a wretched state, and can scarcely be fed, and, as it is, the mortality among them is very great. It is proposed, I understand, to send all the cavalry and Horse Artillery in here, and quarter them in the houses of Balaklava for the winter. Many sick dra- goons have been sent down to No. 5-! transport, and the Victoria steamer is con- verted into an hospital of recovery for sick oflicers and men of the army and marines. NEW sarrsitv arms. In his letter ofthe 26th he says: “The Stromboli has arrived in Balaclava harbour from the fleet, carrying 16 3'2-pounders from the armament of the Br-ittannis, and the Firebrand came in this afternoon with 2! guns of the same description, and about 60ton wciglitof shot and shell. There are also some new guns landed {mm the Queen of the South, direct from England, and large stores ofammunition are lying on the beach in readiness for transport, but country gathering timber for huts, and they can now have no communication with Sebastopol by the Inkertnan causeway, and must go round by the upper or northern road. “ Nov. 28.—All the scum ofthe Levant —-Italians, Smyrnotes, Perotes, Greeks, and rohhers—which had resolved itself for the nonce into domestic servsntry, and accompanied the expedition since it left Gullipoli, is gathering itself up and return- ing to its source. The rats think the ship is sinking; they declare they cannot endure the cold and hardships of the camp any longer, and they are getting away as fast as they can to burrow in the dingy cafes of their nasty cities. ’l he inconvenience of this proceeding to their luckless masters, who are thus deserted Ll their utmost need, is excessive. “Nov. 29.—A storm of wind and rain; the camp miserable to a degree, and Balaltlava intolerable. The heavy mortars with which the Golden Fleece was laden have been landed, but there is no chance of moving them, or the new gunsaud ammu- nition on the wharf. Tl-.lI'. sisos svsrrirosn. “ I sup so one must still head one’s letters ‘Sic o Sebasto ol.’ but really and trnl , there is no siege 0 the place whatever, and a I this delay increases the dilficulty which was caused by our original neglect and indifcrcnce towards the formidable works which we . mittcd the Russians to throw up with impunity’, and which have converted Sebastopol into one of the most formidable defensive positions the world ever saw. it. clfectually, l Ifwe had men enou h to do perhaps the best plan olsreducing d e plnco won boto descend into the valley, the huge guns press lhe c8l'l‘l8ge-Wheel! Of administer ii. a0tInd.b0£|lIn.g to_Prince Menachi- the trucks deeply into the soft earth, and kofland General Liprandi, drive them out of our horse-power is just now inadequate to move them up the hill side. Indeed, our cavalry is at present employed in feeding itself. It is all they have to do. The men are sent down with their horses from the camp to the water-side every day, and curry back their fodder and rations. It is perfectly disgraceful to the authorities, whoever they may be, to see on this, the 12th day after the gale, trusses of coin- presscd hay floating about and rolling in every direction in the harbour, while our horses are dying of sheer inanition. Scan- dalous neglect and indifference to the inte- rests of the public service are chargeable somewhere or another in this matter. “ The struggle between French and Russian riflemen, aided by artillery, was renewed last night as usual. The great bone ofcontcntion, in addition to the Ovens, is the mud-fort at the Quarantine battery, of which the French have got possession, though, truth to tell, it does not benefit their position very materially. The Liege rifles used by the Russians are very etlicient weapons, but there is not much execution done, as the combatants fire entirely at the flash of their opponents’ weapons. o have altered the hours of reliefs, of des- patch of ammunition to the trenches, &c., an as to bother the Russian srtillerymcn, who are generally wont to favour us with s salvo ofshot about the time when they expect our wagons and men are moving down. The French are said to have spiked five guns in their rush inside Ssbsstopol, l PARKER. D0 10. Dssaeber ll, INC. lebsstopol, stating t tons ofthe sotievss sisuttorietl by as es the " and batteries from the Belbe (lgaw many men would do this! Perhaps 120,- the field, and then quietly draw a cordon round he pluco, enclosing forts, citudels, earthworks, ' k to Balaklava. This would be suilicient. Ian su ts itself to every one, and certain y song: i‘; get-ly like it must be done before Ssbastopof al a. “ In order that people at home may know what they have to expect when Sebastopol falls, should it be taken by assault, I may as well tell them that the Russians, availin our inactivit topol four fol have soarped the ground in front of all their batteries ; they have also constructed a strong about’: in front of all their lines—e most formi- dable obstacle to columns. They have t rown u and mounted guns on everyavaila le int, and themselves of and silence, have ortilled Sebas- dwitliin the last ten days. They the rogress of attacking earthworks, they have made sunken batteries fore all their redoubta, and before the Round Tower, as well as along the scarps of the slopes. “ A very long reconnaissance of our lines was made at the distance of about 1000 yards, lgy no less a person than the Grand Duke ichael and a ver large stslf, among whom our knowin peo essy,they could see Prince hlenschiko and ‘enersl Li rsndi. 'I'heGrsnd Duke was recognisable by t e profound respect paid to him by all ; wherever he went,hats were taken of and heads uncovered. a was also detected by the presence of a white dog which ‘ always accompanies in He is a due stout young fellow eaou h, but he could not hr.’ seen much about laklava to t bin: in a good humour, for he is evened“ by the beer telescopes to have _loo_ked ni_igbtll.y.dis'plsaaed While making his inspections‘ ‘I0 tale through which he pill VF . up on iws piles of meters II‘