PUBLISHED ON Establislieo I82: . lllMllS’ o-orsaaorst. - 2 I/‘J.:‘s EVERY -**“ Charlottetown, P. E, island, Wednesday. l+‘ebruai'y 27, 1856. I WEDNESDAY & SATURDAY. New Series. .\o. 321. US TTDGETHER. ARI‘. WI“. SICK? WIIY It has been the lot of the human race to be weighed down b disease and suflering. Il0L- LOWAY‘S PIL S are es ecially adapted to the relief of the WE.-\I{, the t'l~llt.\ ULS, the DELI- CATE, and the INFIlt.\I, of all cliiiies, ages, sexes and constitutions. Professor llolloway personally superintonds the manufiicturo of his medicines. and offers them toa free and enlight- S, ened poo Is, as the best remedy the world ever saw for tie removal of disease. THESE PILLS PURIFY THE BLOOD. These famous Pills are expressly coinbiiied to ope‘ rate on tho stoiiiixch, the liver, the kidneys, the lungs, the skin, and the bowels, correcting any derange- Ineiit in their functions. purifying the blood, the very fountain oflife, and thus curing disease in all its forms. DYSPEPSIA AND LIVER COM- PLAINTS. Nearly halftlie human race have taken those Pills. It has been proved in all parts ofthe world, that no- thing has been found equal to them in cases of dis- orders ofthe livcr, dyi-Ipepsiu,iind stomach coinplniiits generally. They soon gives healthy tone to those organs, however much deranged, and when all other means have failed. GENERAL DEBILITY.—-ILL HEALTH. Many of the most despotic Governments. have opened their Custom Houses to the introduction of these Pills, that they may becoine_the medicine of the masses. Learned Colleges admit, that this Ine- dicins is the best remedy ever known for persons_ of delicate health, or where the S_\‘sIcltI has been_ini- paired, as its invigorating properties never fail to afford relief. FEMALE COMPLAINTS. No I-‘cmalc, young or old, should be without this celebrated medicine. It corrects and regulates the monthly courses at all periods, acting in many cases like a charm. It is also the best and safest medicine that can be given to children of all ages, and for any complaint; consequently no family should be with- Oil II. Holloway/‘s Pill; are the host remedy known in the world for the following Dt'seaseii:—- Ague Dropsy Inflammation Asthma Dysentery Jenn 'ce Bilious Complaints Erysipelas Liver Com- Blotches on the skin Female Irrcgulari- plaints Bowel Complaints ties um ago he has Favors of all kinds Piles Constipation of tho Fits Rheumatism Bowcls Gout Retention of Consumption -‘lead-ache Urine Debiliity . 'gcstion Scrofnla, or Sore Threats Sltone and Gravel King's Evil Secondary Symp- Tic Dolourenx Tumours - toms Venersal Attections Worms all of Ulcers Weakness, from kinds whatever cause, &c. Sold at the Establisliinent of I'rofessor Ilonnowar, 244, Strand, (near Temple Ilar,) London, and 80. Maiden Lane, New York; also by all respectable Druggists and dealers in Medicines throughout the Civilized World, at the following prices :- 29. 5s. 8s. and 20s. Currency each Box. 21%‘ There is a considerable saving by talringtho liirgcr sine . N. B.——Directions for the guitl nice of patients in every disorder afhxcd to each Box. ‘ 1. ; , GEORGE T. IIASZARD, his Wholesale Agent for I’. I1. Island. The National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society of London. VAI'l'l‘AL £500,000 Sterling. Eiiipnwered by Act of Parliatiient, 2d Victoria. A Saving Bank for the Widow and the Urphiin. 'I‘. IIEATII IlAVlLANl),jr. A m! for Prince Edward Island. 0:? Ollice, Queen Square, Charlottetown. September 5, I853. Isl Fall 1855. Duncan, Mason 8' Co. succizssoas TO A. Gt. J. DUNCAN 6:. C0. ENERAL Importers wholesale and retail have .lIl:l'l‘ Rl£CEIVISD,e.r Ilarque Isabel, ti large assortment G 0 0 D S SUITABLE FOR THE rnassnr AND APPROACHING season. Brick Building, corner of Queen and Dorchestcr reels. City of Chiirlottstown, Oct. 8, 1855. Superior Cooking Stoves Scotch Gastmgs. UST RECEIVED by the subscriber, from Glas- gow, a quantity ofCooking Stoves, Cannon and Close Stoves. (all sizes); VVilkio’s Plough Mounting, ' Door Scrapers, Umbrella Stands, Sash \\{eiglits, Cart I and Gig Boxes, Pot Metal, and ii variety of other Castings. The superior quality Iind durability of’ these Castings are well known to the public. 'I‘o be I had at the Store of l HENRY HASZARD. Ch. Town, Great George-St. I October 23d, I855, frisr P UBLISHED. “The Balance of Power.” by JOHN L: I’AGa:, third master of the Centrtil' Academy. 'l‘o be had at the several bookstores in this City. Contents: Introduction; The ssciipe from Elba: The VVatcrloo Campaign; Peace, 1816; Death of Napoleon and Wellington; Entry of ‘the Russians into Moldavia; I853; Battles of Oltenitza and Kalafat; Siege of Silistria; Slaughter at Sinops; Bombardment of Odessa and Scbastopol, Sn}. 1 sn. WILLIAM CONROY. IKPORTER & DEALER IN BRITISH AND AMERICAN GOODS, OF THE BEST QUALITY, IN ALL THEIR VABIET Scale of prices as cheap as any in the City. STORE IN itInEit’s BUILDING, WNIAI TB! TIUPIRANCI HALL, CHARIDTT WN- Tca, Sugar, &o Cutlery. Confectionery. -7 0W811'V- Fancy articles of beauty and durability. Farm for Sale. 0 as sour by Auction, on Tuesday the 18th February, instant, on e Premises, the Leasehold Interest of the Subscriber. I" 92_ M_=|'°' 07 naiso, together with the Buildings, consisting of 2 HOUIII, a new IAIN. 17 K 27, ITABLII sud JOHN HORNE. Winsloo Road, near Mrs. Holroyd's, February 9th, I856. 2i—X. lllll lilllllll. 1855. AMES DI-ZSBRISAY has received by the Majestic, from Liverpool, and Sir Alexander, from London, his usual supplies 0 Autumn and Winter Goods. which are offered to the public at the lowest posciblo prices son OAIR. A large lot o Ready Made Clothing. among which are some very superior Costs. on hand a few very good India Rubber Costs, Sea men's Caps, &c., Nos. I. 1865. other out-buildings. (Fur lIasza'rd’s Gazette) A PUZZLE FOR PASTIME. My fame you’ve heard, my name you’ve seen, To all the world a tale I've been; I'm yet alive, though very weak, And often, lliiinilteriiig loud I speak; The letters of my name you'll find, By pondering iv»-ll within your mind What folloiis li».-rs, so read it well, And see if you my name can spell; My first and .-uer-oiitl added bu, 'l‘o tlieui my fourtlt. and you shall see, 'I‘hiit when pronounced, _ynu‘]l have no more 'l‘li;in can be seen from shore to shore; My second, fourth, and fifth you add, 'I‘o that my sittli, and you lI'|V0 had Where Bell|lt‘llL'l|l’~I star of old was seen, W ch to ivi-e iiien a guide had been; My third and fourth and sixth I call Something with which to play at bull, Or what in daytime you might see Stuck to the branch of some old tree; My eighth and seventh place them well, Add then my sixth, and you will spell \Vliat lioiisv-lit-tapers could not well spare, For then, how could they cook their fare? My fifth and sixth, and seventh take, My ninth and tenth, and they will make \Vhat ilIISWt‘l.s ivr-ll when chairs are few, And now, I've told my name to you. Lot 49, Felt. 22.13.76. MISCELLANEOUS. A CONVIIRI‘ I-‘ROM l\IoIiIt.~iiii':n.inIssi AT MIii.1'a.—()ur attention has been called to the case of Edward Williams and his family, now at Malta. They are, in some sense, it first fruit of missionary labour among the Turks. He has been compel- led to leave his native country from 8. well- grounded fear of capital punishment for apostacy from lslamism. He is a man of tried piety, and, should the way be open- ed for his return home, his knowledge of Turkish and Armenian would make him, and probably his sons, most useful in spreading the gospel. Two of the last named are in the Malta Protestant Col- lege. Willi-ams’s only means of support is $5 a month as doorkeeper of the Pres- byterian church. DEATH or Ronsnr MONTGOMEBY.—- The Rev. Robert Montgomery, an Eng- lish poet of inferior merit but wide cele- brity, better known as “ Satan Montgom- ery,” froni a religious poem of his on “ Satan," dicd recently at Brighton, in England, as the papers by the Asia in- form us. His original name was Goinery, and he was the son of a minor actor of that name attached to the Surrey Theatre, London. He added the prefix “ Mont” to his name in imitation to the famous Sheflield poet, James Montgomery. Hav- ing some ability, he was educated at Ox- ford Univcrsity, at the expense of a Lon- don merchant, and, after graduating there was ordained as a minister in the Eng- lish church. In this capacity, he became quite popular as preacher at Percy chapel, London. Some of his poems ran through a number of editions, but they are all bombastic and unsuited toa cultivated taste. REWARDS FOR -I-Iii: PEacI«:rui..—-A de- ceased Quaker has left $500 to each of the Quaker deputation to the late Em- peror of Russia, and $7500 each to Mr. Cobden and Mr. Bright. DRUNK!-ZN Soi.nir:as.——Tlie statements in the papers of the great drunkenness now prevailing among the soldiers in the Crimea, have unfortunately, caused a great decline in the subscriptions to the [fund for Soldiers’ Wives. A DevicI~:.—Public-house morality re- lceivcs a curious illustration in the case of ‘the female impostor, Alice Grey. It is j stated that on the failing oftlie first charge being known. at least two piiblicans were prepared to make her handsome offers, if . she would hccnine a waiter at their houses, . in the hope that the fame of her misdeeds would attract customers to their houses. Lt-INC-Til 01-‘ THE MISSISSIPPI.-—Th8 Boston (.\I:iss:icliusetts) Transcript gives the total leiigtli of the Mississippi and all its tributaries as fifty-one thousand miles, which is Iiiorc than twice the equatorial circumforenu-.e of the earth ! William Howard Russell, the renowned Crimean correspondent of the London Tiriies, Is now in London. Never was a man so ltl(ltl"ll to gatherings of the weal- thy. lii Ilw l‘ l1ISI. of these brilliant festi- vities, tlic imiposition of adinner to be ;‘given to hi-~~ by his brethren of the press lwill not IN: I 4- lr-.-ist welcome. Mr. Rus- ;sell is the .-; . at‘ a merchant at Dublin! llborn in laid. After having receivecla .‘superior o.lm-ntion, he studied law and practised as :iii attorney in Dublin and j London, win-i~e he made his essays as an lauthor, anal become soon a reporter of , the Times. The Morning Post succeed- led in attaching him to its staff for a time by brilliant offers. but he soon returned to the Times, and was always employed in matters requiring an impressive and peculiar style of writing. At the out- break of the present war he went as spe- cial corrcspondcnt for the Times to the Crimea, where he has since remained without interruption, excepting for a short period when he was at Serapia. It appears still, that Miss Murray, one of the maids of honor to the Queen of England, has been constrained to give up her place, because she does not favor the views of the Abolitionists in her book of travel in America. In a recent letter to a friend, she says--that, knowing the sentiments she entertains respecting sla- very to be in opposition to those of the Court, and knowing also that persons high in authority, connected with the Court, had objected to the publication of these sentiments, while holding her official position, she felt it her duty to resign, al- though by so doing she deprives herself of her influence and position at Court, her ofiicial residence, and income which can ill be spared. Still, she does it cheer- fully, rather than forego the publication of her work. The Queen, however, still remains her firm friend. AovI.'rs:Iu'riori or Fooo.—A Cockrny wag of uncultivated aspirations was heard to say, that halrer’s bread reminded him of the Middle Ages: because he always asso- ciated the idea of it with Hn.i.ui. I