, THE EX aie ¥ enough for its publication. If the virtuous ex-Commissioner | owing to the popular pbrenzy which he s0 largely stimu! ted, -—the model propriety man—was so very desirous to make a! was elected a member of Parliament—as a debater, proved parade of his indignation in the columns of the Islander, it | himself an utter failure from his inability to speak upon any was his duty, as an honest, disingenuove man, to give the | question for even two consecutive minutes. In 1843 was whole of the correspondence to the pablie. Why bas a part prosecuted for causing the publication of some foolish resolu- been suppressed ? * he answer is obvious — because Mr, tions against the Government, which were held to be libel- Campbell was called upon to name the parties whom he ac-| lous—made a whining speech in his defence; which he had cuted, but had not the boldness to do it; and, therefore, did} written out for the occasion—was convicted, bit judgment not Mke te estibie te the world his waut of moral courage. | suspended through the merciful interposition of the authori- We are iufuenced by no angry feelings towards the ex-Com- | ties—continued to blaze away in the newspapers at julge, missioner. We believe that, like a great many other very jury and governor. Was clected again to the House of As- sensible people, he reads and pays for the Examiner, and | sembly in 1846—split with the liberal party there, because the thing we are most surprised at is, that it has not made aj} they were then becoming favourably inclined to Sir Henry better man of him; bat we have a public ditty to discharge, | Huntley, who begun to carry out the principles of that party gnd we are determined it shall be discharged to the utmost) io the administration of the Government. Hated Sir Henry of owe ability, without regard for patron or friend. We) for two reasons: first, because Sir Henry promoted the libel therefore feel called upon to give to the public those parts of! prosecution ; secondly, because our hero was never invited to| the correspondence withheld from the press by Mr. Campbell. | Government House with the leading members of the Liberal Let our readers make their own comments upon the letters party. From 1847 to 1851 begun to coquet with the Tory below given, and let them estimate, too. the value of the ex-| party—professed to have made a great mistake in stigmatiz- Commissioner’s accusations that are left so wretchedly lame |ing the leaders of that party as “ traitors, murderers and ————— ee ee ce en set ee _ = _ —_— ‘tion. and vague. “Cot, Secretary's Orrice, “25th April, 1855. “ Sin —I am directed by the Lieutenant Governor to ac- knowledge the receipt of your letter of the 17th instant, tendering your resignation of the office of Commissioner for | the recovery of Small Debts, and to inform you that His Ex-| cellency hus been pleased to accept the same. 1 am to add that His Excellency is not aware that any right has been | asserted on the part of the Government to interfere with the | * free exercise of the right of thinking,” either in your case) ‘or any other. If, however, the exercise of such undoubted | right should be accompanied by active hostility against the Government under which a gentleman is employed, his re- moval from office becomes a duty on the part of the Govern- ment, unless it should be anticipated by resig -ation. * With reference to the accusations or imputations you have thought proper to make, affecting the characters of cer- tain Justices of the Peace in your section of the country, His | Excellency directs me to call upon you to mame the parties to whom you refer, in order to the adoption of such proceed- ings on the part of the Government as may appear necessary ; and especially to enable His Hxcellency to direct that the parties should at once be put iu possession of the full extent of the accusations, and the party by whom they are preferred, for such explanations as they may be desirous of affording. ‘Tam, sir, your obedient servant, (signed) “A. MITCHELL, “Asst. Col. See’y. " Janzs Cauppett, Esq., St. Eleanor’s.” [copy.} “Sr. Exranon’s, 27th April, 1855. — “ Sin,—T beg to acknowledge the receipt of your commu- nication of the 25th instant, informing me that the Lieut. Governer has beeu pleased to accept my resiguation as Com- missioner for the recovery of Small Debts at St. Eleanor’s, &c., and calling upon me to “name the parties’ to whom I refer m my letter to His Excellency. ; “Ta reply, 1 beg to remark, for the information of the Lieutenant Governor, that although I “thought fit” to make | such broad “imputations” against the characters that dis- | grace the Commission of the Peace, it was not for the purpose | of privatelpamaligning them to His Excellency, which will | fully appear Upon the publication of my resignation—a method | I adopted to explain to the public the cause of my resigua- | cion, which method will relieve His Excellency from the | trouble of putting those parties “in possession of the full | extent of the accusations.” The public will see the extent | of the accusations; the very individuals themselves, who are | unmistakingly and notoriously known by the public, will see | “the full extent” of them, and writhe under the just and} merited contempt of an indignant public. i “TI conceive [ have dune my duty to inform His Excel-| leuey of the fact of such characters enjoying Government patronage —a fact which no man can attempt to disprove. | And bean only repeat what I suid in my former letter to| His Exeelleney —a fact well known by some of His Excel-| leney’s advisers, who, I am satisfied, could * name” some, at | least, of thew to him, if it did pot suit a purpose to do other- | Wise. “I beg to inform His Excelleney that [ do not shriuk from waiming those parties from the least doubt of fully substantiat- ing all and mote than I have said; but they are so well kuown, from my description of them to His Excellency, that! uine out of ten of the public in this part of the country can | ai apy time name them to His Excelleacy. «I am, sir, your obedient servant, |corr.] {sigued) “JAMES CAMPBELL. “A. Marcmett, Esq., Asst. Col. See’y,, “ Charlotectown.” j —_—_— - Ocr readers wil! be amused on reading the following letter, which bas been taken from the Rontreal Gazette, and handed | to us bya friead. We think we know the old File, and | siall presentiy describe him, who occusionally writes from this Island a column of trash for our Canadian contemporary, and who is well hit off in a few seutences by the other cor- | respondent of the Gazette who signs his letter “R. G.”, Well, then, to relieve the anxiety of “ R. G.” and other} Canadiaus, who may be curious to know what sort of an ani-, mal is the Gazette's correspondent in this Island, we give | the following sketch, which we will guarantee to be correst : | —Le stands about six feet high—with a stoop in the back— | | But our Canadian readers will perceive that a detailed refuta- robbers,” and all at once discovered that they were men of’ great public and private worth. Continued every day to give new proofs of his apostacy, and in 1850, when he had the effrontery to offer himeelf a third time to bis constituents, was most contemptuously rejected, and a plain country fariner, quite unknown to fame, was put ia his place. In 1851, when the new form of Government was put in practice, our hero was hired, for a paltry consideration, to supply a thick-headed printer with brains, and to malign his old poli- tical associates. A renegade friend—notwitstanding the seeming contradiction of terms—is said to be the most malig- nant of enemies,—our hero has fully justified the truth of the remark. Since 1851 he has written reams of the coars- est and foulest slander against those who mistook him for an honest man in 1842 and 1843, But his writing has been to no purpose, so far as himself and his present allies are concerned, He has not only not failed to raise those allies in public estimation, but he has sunk them beyond redemp- tion, This has been abundantly proved at the hustings many times since. He has, indeed, so materially helped the Liberal party by his abuse of them, that it was gravely asked of one of that party by an intelligent gon leman from a neighbouring Province, a couple of years ago :—-“‘ How much do you pay Mr. So-and-So for continually abusing your party with such hearty good will?” We must confess that we do not pay him any thing, but if any of the Liberals will open a subscription list on this account, we will put our own naine down for something handsome, “ provided always,” as they say in Acts of Parliament, he will continue to Jibel and slander the Liberal party in general and ourselves in particu- lar. Responsible Government is, of course, the object of his most ardent detestation. His present masters and feeders lost office and station under that system. Hence it is his duty to misrepresent ity working. But what is worse than all in our hero’s estimate of Responsible Government—its establishment has secured office and honor to the mea who have remaiaed true and stead/ast to their principles, while he continues to be the despised slave to the objects of his | ancient hate. Do our Canadian, or any other friends, wish to know the name of oar hero, after this true and particular account of him? If they do, let them make known their wish, and we will gratify it without a moment’s hesitation ; but the picture is so exact, that we are sure our hero himself will be the firs: to acknowledge it. “But why does he send his communications to the Montreal Gazette, whea he has a paper under his control in the Island ?” Dear reader, why do you ask such a silly question, but if you insist upon an answer, here it is: Nobody in the Island who has judgment or intelligence reads his lucubrations without knowing them to be false, and penned wiih the worst of motives. In Montreal the case is different. Nobody, ex-| cepting the editor of the Gazette, knows the character of the correspondent of that paper, and he, on that account, sup- poses that his false statements will receive more credence than they would if first published in this Island. Nobody | believes him here; every body may possibly believo him there. We at first thought of commenting on the several para- graphs in the foilowing letter from the pen of our hero, and pointing out the utter falsity of each and every one of them. tion is unnecessary, after what we have written; our Island readers know the old Rip too well to require any thing of the kind. A lazy old parson—so the story goes—was once found praying devoutly over a barrel of beef. When asked | to explain the reason for his pious employment, he answered, that he was merely saying grace in the gross to save time and trouble of saying it in detail when the beef came to the table. Itis with such a disposition we present the subjoined hash to our readers, feeling satisfied it would be only a waste of time to make a long story about every separate part ot it. (From the Montreal Gazette.) PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND CORRESPONDENCE OF THE MONTREAL GAZETTE. SUFFERING IN THE SIRAITS—POLITICS— BANKING —PATRIOTIC FUND. P. EB. Island, March 30, 1855. My anticipations of the loss of life, from the dishonorable conduct of the Government in taking the contract for con- veying the winter mails across the Straits from able and AMINER. grate, unless he be detained by ties which cannot readily be removed or severed, * About cighteen months ago, a Mr. Wilson, of the Imperial Treasury, through the Colonial Office, recommended the Le gislature to pass a Banking Isa, and pointed out the immense advantage which an institution of the sort. would be to the Colony. A Bank Act was accordingly passed, and nearly a year afterwards a long despatch, written by Sir C. E. Tre- vellyn, who cuts so sorry a figure in Crimean affairs, was received, refusing the Royal Assent, though it was a trans- cript of a Nova Scotia Act, a successful and healthy opera- In its room, he transmitted a wild-goose affair, which he wishes the Legislature to accept in its stead, and which is, of course, extoiled to the skies by the very men, now in office, who voted for the Bill of last session, now disallowed. It is probable that our 80,000 inhabitants will not be favored with a Bank at all—but such is Responsible Government in a swall Colony. . As the Mémbers of the Executive Council openly avow the policy of the Government to be, that none but “friends” shall hold uny office, however small, and declare every man to be an “enemy” who votes against any of their supperters, such policy involves not only loss of life—as has been experienced in two cases—but fils the lower Courts and Magistracy with dent, who offered some observations the progre @ made by the Institute in diffasing a love of the arts and: sc ences, prorogued the Institute to euch time as the Com- mittee might determine on for commencing a new session next winter, To Corresponprnts.— We have received a length communication from William Cooper, Esq., on ‘the Becheat question. We shall give in our next No., if not the whole, a very large portion of it. We have received 2 communication signed “J.P.” in re~ ference to Mr. James Campbell’s letter of resignation. The writer has not complied with the rule which we baye severa? times brought to the notice of our correspondents, viz: that no communication can be entertained, bearing a fictitious sig- nature, unless the real name of the author is furnished to the editor. Jet “J.P.” comply with this rule, and we shall then determine whether we ought to publish his animadver- sions on the very improper and unproven accusations prefer- red by Mr. Campbell against certain Justices of the Peace in Prince County. Banque Sim Atexanper.—This well-known and expedi- wen whose sole claim to office is not integrity and abilities,4tious trader between the Old and the New Worlds arrived but ignorance and « negation of political principle. mention ove or two cases as examples. _ An ignorant low character had bis name put on thg roll of Justices, because it was supposed that being a bustling sort of body, he would make a good canvasser. He soon demon- strated the propriety of the appointment by being convicted of an assault. Sir Alexander removed his name from the list, but it has been restored by Mr. Daly. For the same canvassing reasous, a very poor man of indif- ferent character was connected with a J. P. some three or four yearsago. Previously to the General Election of 1853, suspecting that a gentleman of the most unblemished reputa- tion would be a candidate—opposed to the policy of the Government—he charged him in several letters, published in one of our papers, with such a series of crimes as should have excluded him from all society, had any one of the charges been true. His real name was signed to those let- ters—}buat the calumniator was passed over, as too low a scamp to be noticed, and the priuier prosecuted for defama- tion. A lawyer was brought t:om Nova Scotia to defend him, who, after a careful investiyation, rested the defence on the fact that every allegation was not ouly unfounded, but so notoriously false, that the character of the plaintiff had sustained no damage. Yet this individual still signs J. P., and there are others on the list quite as bad, if not worse, The Assembly has voted £2,000 to the Patriotic or Widows’ Fund, and { think private subseriptions will amount to about £1,000 more. I may TO THE EDITOR OF THE MONTREAL GAZETTE. Str,—Your Prince Edward's Island correspondent is very angry with somebody or something; and this, I infer, not _aloue from his rather literary history of the early antecedents of some of the public characters of that bappy Utopia of his, wherein, from being a modest vender of spiced delicacies, such as gingerbread, a man may attain to the very highest range of poiitical power and_ importance, but also from his too evident misconception of Responsible Government. Judging fro the elegance of his periods, he must be sup- posed to possess the proper sentimeuts of an enlightened citizen for his own society and Government; and he cannot, therefore, but be aware that to disparage either, before the world, and beyond the syhere of both, is very unpatriotic, and altogether similar to the sin of those ill-judging individu- als—pecuiiar to Colonial lite—who deen it essential to their own respectability to depreciate everything and everybody about thea, On the borders of the great American forest, or on the sea-shores of our Continent, it may be excusable ia aman to have his civilization and his “coat of arms” (his coat and arms) a little more natural than what is just now | the standard in such conventicnal matters in proud old Europe. The more intimate our acquaintance wit nature, the better are we qualified to draw our canons of criticism from virtue alune, and the less liable are we to refer all true nobility to aneestry; and your correspondent is well aware of this himself, it would seem, from his strictures being in- dulged in under protest. Responsibit Government, he tells us, is much abused in Prince Edward's Island, by the Executive undertaking to relieve the Chief Justice there of the responsibility which has hitherto attached to his office of naming the Sheriffs; and be attributes this act of violatien of the principles of Responsible | Governmeat to the pernicious “ rule exercised by the Colonial Office, throuzh the ignorance and indigence of the Colony ” over the people of the Island. | Other cases uf the assumption of a power by the Executive to make all appointments to offices and trusts under the Government, bave been cited; but if your correspondent has been equally unfortunate in them as in the first, he could not have satisfied the readers of ihe Montreal Gazette iu any other way so thoroughly of the legitimate working of Responsible Government in the hands of those statésuwen of the gingerbread-basket avyhom he con- demns, nor conv'nced Canadians better of the honorable rule of the Colonial Office, exercised at present within the Colony, If the Colonists of the Island cannot emancipate their homes from serfdom, uader an absentec-mononoly, such as that said to exist there, by their own votes ut the-hustings, | they are not likely to find much help from the judgments of the Chief Justiee or the executions served on them by any Sheriff. . And so I have no doubt of such an application of Respon- in Charlottetown during the past week im 27 days from Liverpool, G. B, She was laden with goods for the owner (Hon. W. W. Lord) and several of our principal merchants, aud had six cabin and nineteen steerage passengers, We understand the owner intends to transfer the Sir Alexander from the Liverpool to the London route, for which latter port she will sail about the 10th of next month; and a splendid newly-built clipper ship, now nearly ready for launching, will take the place of the Sir Alexauder om the Liverpoel line. oer eee eee sasinentae filarried. n the 23rd ult., by the Rev. W. Snodgrass, Mr. Robert A. Treneuran of Charlottetown, to Eliza Jane, daughter of the late Robert Minto, Haq... C. E, Kdiuburgh, Seetiand, aud late of Newfoundland. — Hlarine Intelligence. ~~, o~ —- PORT OF CHARLOTTETOWN. Entered. May 4—Schr Queen of the Isles, Fougen, Arichat; bal, Susan and Mary, Crockett, New York; gceods. 5Sth—Packet, Babin, Arichat; bal. 7th—Manly, Forest, do; do. Sth—Active, Babin, do; de, 10th— Bark Isabel, Liverpool; goods to A & J Duncan & Co., and. others. Bark Sir Alexauder, Walsh; Liverpool; gouds——te WW Lord and others. Cleared. May 4—Schr Martha Aun, Campbell, New Brunswick; produce. Sth— Brigt Jemima, Green, New York; do. 8th—Sehe Mary Jane Gilbert, Terrio, St John, N B; do. Ship News. St. Joun’s Newrounp.anp, April 30—Arrived Sonora, Malone, P E[. Havirax, May 7—Captain Reynolds, of Schooner Montano, reports on his voyage from P E Island, when off Whitehead, lest Thursdsy wock, saw several packages, like cases Dry Goods, some of which were marked TE K. He afterwards fell in with another package, but on reaching it found it broken and nothing remaining but straw and pieces of bottles—marked D Cin red. UW ADVsRTISZMZNTS. Molasses, Molasses, Molasses---new Crop, Bright and Heavy,’ BY AUCTION, 'O-MORROW, Tuesday, 15th instant, at 12 o'clock, on Peake’s Wharf, landing from Schooner Sopbronia, from Halifex,— 22 puncheons choise Molasses, sticks W. T. PAW, Auctioneer. May 14. Auction. N FRIDAY next, at the Subseriber’s Sale Room, at the hour of 11 o’clock, noon, A CONSIGNMENT OF MER. CHANDIZE, as follows:— 45 Boxes TOBACCO (a prime article) 66 do SUMMER CANDLES 287 do SOAP 2 Cases trimmed and untrimmed BONNETS, now janding- per Schooner Sophronia, from Halifax. —aALsO— 10 Chests TEA, 2 Bales Cotton WARP. Terms Ar SALE. BENJAMIN DAYIES, Auctioneer, May 14, 1855. For London direct. pur fast sailing Barque SIR ALEXANDER, James Scorr, Commander, will leave Charlottetown for the above Port on or about the 10th June next, and will leave London on or about the first Septembez next, for Charlottetown. For Freight or passage, please apply w W W LORD, Charlottetown, or Messrs. Keal & Koberts, Merchants, London, The Owner of the Barque Sir Alexander avails himself of this oppor- tunity to return his sincere thanks to the Merchants of Charlottetown, and others, for the handsome support he has received since he put the | Sir Alexander in the carrying trade between this Port and Liverpool; land he will feel grateful for a continuation of their favours towards the | Same vessel in her new line between Charlottetown aud London. { He begs to inform his friends that he intends to launch a clipper-built _ Ship of 509 tons, to take the place of the Sir Alexander, and he expects to have her ready to sail fur Liverpool on or before the first of July nekt. ' This Ship is intended exclusively for the line on which the Sir Alexander | sailed, and ne expense will be spared to make her a safe, trust-worthy and comfortable Ship. W. W. LORD Charlottetown, May 14, 1855 “The Poor ye have always with you,” is perhaps sixty years of age—the head is pretty well experienced hands, and vesting it in others whose qualifications bicached by the frosts of time, aud what is most remarkable were a vote for the Government at elections, have been | about the said head is, that it seems as if it was not properly | fatally realized, as you have no doubt seen by the public | fusiened on to his body, for he every now and then gives it a! prints. ‘Two boatmen, with three passengersand a mail, left. twitch as if to put it in its right place,—some learned people the opposite shore in a small open boat, but becoming en-| in the Island haye frequently ascribed this pericranian move-| tangled in the ice, they could neither reach our coast nor ment to the uneasy sensation said to be felt by what is vul- return wlience they departed, until after four days and nights, garly called “a flea in the ear.” The countenance is sinis- One of the passengers perished from exhaustion, and all ter—horribly ugly, and is indebted to the small pox for a would have inevitably shared the same fute had the weather myriad of huge indentations, The eyes*are little twinkling been very cold. As it was they were only preserved by greys, Waich seem ashamed to look the world in the face, killing a small dug that accompanied them, drinking the | —the nose cannot beast of either the Roman or Grecian cut; blood, and eating the flesh raw. and as for the teeth, with the exception of two or three ven-| The Legislature, though in session, has not been doing erable stumps, they are among the thi that were. The much, and the little business it has transacted is not much habiliments are seedy, and their style and fit may be inferred to its credit. The mest important measure is a Bill to trom the circumstance, that they were in all likelihood picked transfer the nomination of Sheriffs from the Chief Justice to up in some pawnbroker’s shop a dozen or twenty years ago. the Government. Previeusly, the Chief Justice annually So much for the outward man. j ‘noted the names of three fit and proper persons to fi] the We kaow httle or nothing of the history of this individual |‘ office of Sheriff, of whom the Lieut. Governor was com-. - arther back than fifteew or sixteen years, he having arrived in! pelled by law to select one. But since the Colonial Othco | ‘ae Colony about that time, hot from the rebellion in Canada, | has thought proper te rule through the ignorance asd i where, according to his own shewing, he took an active part geuce of the Colony, it is unpleasant to have the crimes or azainst the followers of Papineau, bat in what capacity the fallacies of the vfficials exposed, and hence the new law. | history or tradition sayeth not. He claims some honor, It is a Government measure, xo doubt introduced with the we believe, fur having been one of the valiant rabble’ entire consent of the Licut. Governor; and as it was declared | “a0 sacked the Vindicator office in Montreal, in 1837; but in the Assembly, by two Executive Councillors, that the Waétacr he signaliged his name in any other achievement, we Sheriffs would be expected to support the Government, there. Must leave to himself or his biographer to say. When he|cau be no doubt that the object of the Bill is to prevent dis- | arrived in this Island he found Tcryism—akin tothat on cussion, and muzzle the Press, through the medium of packed whose side he fought ia Canada—at a heavy discount, and partizan Juries. The disorder which will, wost eobaleh , be popular excitement running high. He settled among an ex- introduced into the Colony by the measure, will be a plume citaule and ignorant class of the population—threw off his’ of feathers in Mr, Daly’s cap. A few years ago, the salu- Tory principles with more facility than he could throw off brity and cheapness of the Colony induced several geotlemen his old coat—begun to attend public meetings, and mumble |of 4 Out soditious speeches—yushed into print whenever and | now Wherever he could-—beeame all of a sudden a tremendous for the béncft of about a dozen absentes ietors, for the vadical—ealled the old Famil Compact, whose toady he! next five years, as it bas for the last five, it is but too pro- now is,“ a pagk of traitors, m great damage had been done in consequence to the Russian ererg and robbers.” Ip 1842, ‘byble that every respeotable and independent man wil) emi-' sible Government of the affairs of the Island being a ** plume of feathers” in the Licutenant Governor’s cap, and a glory | encircling his name in the hearis of the Prince Edward Islanders hereafter. BY ESPECIAL REQUEST. Vocal and Instrumental Concert, Under the Patronage of His Excellency Domnick Daly, Esq,, and Lad). * > In behaif of the Poor of Charlottetown, ‘ am i Gentle vho gave the last Concert, in aid of the NEWS FROM EUROPE. 7 noe einen to Sone that they have consented to give i ‘ § . ORR’ eveni he 22d instant, for the above Tue English Mail arrived here in the Rosebud on Wednesday | ae ne Tecsday Bre, ? . afternoon last. We have dates us late as the 29:h Apzil,| “The friends of tle Poor in our own land will now have an opportunity furnishing the important intelligence that the bombardmeut of exbibiting their zeal in behalf of the distressed a s Sere m : . . at| ‘TickeTs—Reserved seats, 2s 3d; Rear Is 6d,—to. be had at the Stores of Sebastopol had been revumed by ihe allied forces, and that oP ns Suis. T Desbrisay & O@ Henry Stamper, and W K Wat- =< | son, Esqrs works, ‘The storming of that fortress has in all probability, ggr A Plan of the Reserved Seats to be seen at the Store of Maszard taken place befure this tine. The next news froin Kngland | # Owea bag 36. may, therefure, be looked forward to with great interest. | The Vienna Conference had terminated without any result | Lhe Emperor and Lurpress of the French had visited Eng- laud, aud bud been received with every mark of distinction. | Yours trul ys R. G. New Goods—WNew Style. YROM GREAT BRITAIN, Y the “Sie Avexanver,” 16 packages of GOODS, xeady for inspection as soon as landed, at mere Fe BELL’S CLOTHING STORE, MARKET SQUARE, Aveotazx Concertr.—Mr. W. Duchemin and the gentle- | Consisting in part of Broad Cloths, Summer Cloths, Fancy Cassimeres men whe were associated with him in the late Concert On ra rosea ale citations Biineoteon i ae wee 2. aes , »a, | Frene uv estings, White and fa . tins, behalf of the Patriotic Bund, have, it will be seen, embraced Geomndin Went shapehs@onke ant Gall? . our suggestion, and volunteer to give another Concert in aid | Every deseription of garment, comprising all the new styles, will be of ghe poor of this Island, The fine new organ will remain inade to measure, from these Goods, in a superior manner, and ab in the ‘emperance Hall. for that purpose, and the decora- proves Coeelt the ties. tions, we understand, will be ona splendid scale, May their ae shadows never be less, and may the most ample sagcess crown “ © their eliorts. —ALso— rge and choice assortment of shirts, neck-ties, suspenders, “~s Landkerchiefs, hats and caps, together with every article requ for gentlemen’s wear, except the boots. » May 4. Cc. & J. BELL. : : MENS’ READY-MADE CLOTHING. Mecwayics’ Institure. — Owing ta the absence, through We are desirous of informing the public, that we haye on hand, and it Means to select it oo their abode; but they indisposition, of the President, who Was previously announced | are constantly making up, the larseat and best stock of Ready-madce talk of leaving, and if the Government be conducted | ecture at the {nstitute, Mr. Jobu | Clothing in Charlottetown—cut by ourselves, and madeup by workmen ives with fashion- fai ; liwwade garments, at reasonable prices, can be suited better of relative “importance of Great Britaiv.” Is gave rise to a | Sy consbitahens mis than aay other in Coarlottetawn. lively and protvacted discussion, after which the Vice Prést- | C. & J. BELD, Tailors, eppovite the Market. to give the concluding re LePage cae forward and read an interesting paper “om the | in our employ. Persons desirous of furnishing thems