iene —— as THE EXAMINER. EEN TET TTL, OE I TT LE TLE EN, a ES, Literature. NN i le ~~ nO (From Bileckwood’s Magazine for December, 1856.) OUR INDIAN EMPIRE, ( Continued.) Having thus surveyed the administrative m chinery of| Even a city ( British Lodia, the question next ar sos, what has been done by use forthe sosial and moral condition o! the people? Our revenue-system, while benefitting ourselves, has greatly bene- fitted our Indian subjects, compared with the tyranny and corruption of the native princes; but many social benefits and. triumphs. of. civilisation have been accomplished by the Company and _ its officers, at uo little expense to the former, and personal risk and hardship to the latter, the history of which as recorded fn the graphic pages of Dr. Kaye's work, the world will not willingly let die. No people in the world exhibit so many exceptional de- | eelopments of haman nature as the races of India. The most impressible of races, ideas and views of life take root amongst them, such as would find no acceptance elsewhere. Supple and pliant in their bodily frame, they are equally so in their mental and moral constitution ; and upon no other race has the force of circumstances, or the contagion of ex- ample, so potent an influence in determining them towards good or evil. “ We had been nearly two centuries connected with them,” says Dr. Kaye, “ by ties at least of commerce, before we knew very much more about the natives of Andis | than that they were a race of black people, with bare legs, | carrying the greater amount of their apparel piled up on the top of their heads.” And when at length the scales fell from | our eyes, no littleastonishment awaited us. The awakening | hardly dates farther back than a quarter of a century ago. | Hall and then an assistance, | the agents of their own civilisation. First Dixon went amongst them without any Europe --2 local battalion was raised from the people the at once furnishing sapport for the authorities, and reducing Ito discipline and giving employment to men to whom we had become a habit. But the plough was the chief civiliser. Tanks were dug, wells were sunk, the jungles were cleared, a was secured to the fields. “mselves, and a regular supply of water ) held Samual nevudadait) rose at Dixon's bidding with ae ‘rapidity of magic, Ln three months from the laying wal he first stone, its spacious bazaar was opened for trafhie ; and in 'a short time two thousand families had flocked in from the trading towns of the adjoining provinces, and engaged in those manufacturing and cominercial operations which were waiting to complete the well-being of Mairwara. 3 | ‘Phe civilisation of the Bheel tribes is another work worthy lof lasting commemoration. Candeish, western India, was the seene of this achievement. The Bheel tribes constituted about an eighth of the population. When the country was ‘n a settled and flourishing state, these people had been | principally employed as village watchmen—a class nowhere ‘in India of unexceptionable character. ven at their best they appear to have been a lawless and unscrupulous people ; but | when the convulsions and misery of the country began, they ‘formed themselves into robber-gangs, and became tbe Ish- | maelites of that part of the world, At times massacred by ‘hundreds, at times triamphing over the Guicowar's troops sent against them—reckless and migratory, passing from place to place, throwing up a cluster of rude buts in the course of a few hours, and delighting not in more permanent habitations—they would stream down from their mountain- homes, sacking and firing the villages in the plains, driving off the cattle, and securing the “ head-men ” for the sake of the ransoms they would fetch; so they existed. It is not surprising, therefore, that when the country first passed into le wus the revelation of the hideous crime of Thuggee that) our hands, but a few measures for the reclamation of these first feirly let in the light upon us. In 1810, we find an) tribes were tried without success. It was reserved for James order issaed by the commander-in-chief, cautioning the Sepoys | Outram—an officer who has since won for himself one of the about to proceed. on leave to their homes, against a“ de- | most distinguished reputations in India, and who is now scription of murderers denominated Thugs ;” but it was not doing for Oude what Thomason has done for the North-west until twenty years afterwards that the secrets of the horrible} Provinces, and Lawrence for the Punjab—then a lieutenant fraternity became known, and active measures were adopted | in the Bombay Native Infantry, to. give successful effect to for its suppression. Then it was that thestartling fact flashed | the philanthropic measures of the Government, Under his upon the Indian Government, that there was a regular class jable management, a local battalion, the Bheel Corps, long of its subjects to whom murder was a profession, and not despaired of as impracticable, at length began to take form. only a_ profession, but also a religion; and that a great) Outram brought his wild recruits into familiar contact with brotherhood of crime, hating taken @ sacrament with all | the high-caste Sepoys of his own regiment, and the conciliatory possible solemnity, weat about the country murdering in cold} manners of the old soldiers went far to rivet the confiderice bloodless style, by strangling, in remote places, unwary tra-| which the bold frank manner of their young leader had vellers whom they could seduce into their toils. All this| already engendered. The work of civilisation then weut on was done with the most consummate art and profound secrecy ;| rapidly. A careful surveillance of the people, preservation the members assumed disguises, and played parts, with the} of the peace, and administration of justice, were inagurated ; greatest address; they had also a secret dialect of their own, | their old profession of village watchmen was opened to the and secret signs by which they silently communicated with| Bheels, and liberal encouragement was given to them to each other. These gangs had no permanent form; the | settle and devote themselves to agricultural pursuits. So members assembled fora murdering expedition, and dispersed, | great was the success which attended these efforts, that in vanished, when it. was over. They belonged, for the most| 1843 it was offivially reported that “ the districts formerly part, to particular villages, where they left their wives and| the scene of every outrage, where neither life nor property children ; and they outwardly followed some peaceful calling. | was secure, now enjoyed tranquility; the roads formerly The real cause of their ogeasional absences was often a matter | hazardous for the armed paty, were traversed at all hours by of open notoriety ; but they did not murder their neighbours, | single passengers; the formidable list of crimes had dwindled indeed, the village benefitted by the blood-money that was down to a few paltry thefts; and the Bheels, from outcasts, brought home ; the Zemindar, or head-man, was paid a tribute | had become members of society, daily rising in respectability or bush-money, and the police officials were likewise bribed into silence, * I and my fathers have been Thugs for twenty generations,” said one of these professional stranglers; aud they even believed that their patron goddess Davee had sent | judgments and death upon all the native princes who had persecuted them. But in the Company they encountered a more redoubtable foe. Captured Thugs were got to turn approvers ;/the whole secrets of the eraft were divulged ; the laws were relaxed so as to meet the difficulties of the ease; the gangs were hunted down in all directions ; our jails were filled with Thugs: and a great and horrid institation which had existed for centuries was broken up in a few years. Davee was vanquishe]l. ‘ The Company’s = fortune is such,”’ said the discomfited murderers, ‘ that ‘fore the sound of your drums, sorcerers, witches, and | demons take flight; and how can Thuggee stand?” An) covasional traveller may still at intervals be strangled by the wayside ; bat the system is destroyed—the profession ruined —-the guild scattered, never again to be associated into a great corporate body. Another crime peculiar to India, though less so than Thuggee, was Dakoitee, or systematic gang-robbery. The externals of this crime early forced themselves upon the notice of our Indian administrators, but it was not till recently discovered that Dakoitee was the normal condition of whole tribes born and bred to the profession,—that there were robber castes in India just as there were soldier-castes. or writer-castes, and that men went out to prey upon the property of their fellows—and, if need be, on their lives— with strict religious observance of sacraments and sacrifice. Not that all Dakoitee was of this hereditary character ; there were also lay members, as it were, of the profession, who troubled themselves little about presiding goddesses, and set about their work ia a less scientific style; but these all ral- lied round men of the hereditary castes as leaders, and believed they could accomplish little without their agency. Like the Thugs, the Dakoits all have settled abodes, and ostensibly follow a peaceful calling, although the object of their frequent journeys is no secret to the rest of the villagers, Indeed, the headman of the village and the police share the spoil with the successful robbers; and the former even supplies them with food and clothing in time of need, and makes monied advances to them. It was not till 4843 that special and vigorous measures were taken for the suppression of this wides pread evil. Colonel Sleeman, who had succeeded so well against the Thugs, was appointed to the task, and accomplished a great dea! of good. He and | his associates struck at the robber-castes, which are now well nigh extinguished. The hereditary feature peculiar to India has been destroyed, but Dakoitee, or ordinary gang- robbery, is not suppressed. In Bengal, as we have said, the crime has appeared in great virulence; and probably nothing will suffice to put an end to it as long as the con- dition of the peasantry in certain districts is not improved. The history of British conquest in the Kast has eerteinly a bright side. In its chapters will be found recorded the exploits of men striving and toiling under the fiery skies of the Tropics, and sacrificing often life itself in their efforts to and apperrance, and becoming useful and obedient servants of the State.” Since then, education has been made to lend its aid in the work of improvement. Tue schoolmaster has taken the young Bheel in hand, and has brought him within the pale of civilised life ; and there is now no fear of a relapse. Such is the beneficent work of reclamation which the Indian Government pursues in the more barbarous districts submitted to its sway. Its mode of dealing with larger territories long subjected to anarchy or native misrule, —how it establishes in them a reign of order and justice, and how diligently it sets about developing the agricultural resources of the country, thereby furnishing employment for the formerly predatory population,—we have fully shown in a recent Number, by reference to the Punjab and the other provinces annexed during Lord Dalhousie’s rule.* It remains for us to notice briefly some cruel and horrible customs and rites prevalent among the natives of India, which our Government has succeeded in either wholly or partially suppressing. India is the great land of inconsistencies. Nowhere, among certain classes of the population, is life, in all its manifestations, more venerated and cared for; yet nowhere, in the mass, is it less regarded,—and that not from any sanguinary disposition, but simply from an indifference to its value, Suttee, or widow-burving, is one of those cruel rites of which we need not speak—the subject being so familiar to the British public. Yet what a striking spectacle was it, —how indicative of the strange people we had found in India, and of the gulf that separated our sympathies from theirs—to see “a young woman—one, in our eyes, perhaps little more than a child—ascend with heavenly composure the funeral pile of her husband, and with =n unaltered coun- tenance, resign herself to acruel death. You saw her calmly and gracefully performing the last offices due to the dead, and the last courtesies to the living; serenely decorating her person as for a bridal, and in an unbroken voice repeating the formulas of prayer dictated by the unpitying priests ; then walking with steady tread round the pyre, mounting it without a shudder of fear, and perishing without a murmur.”t The belief was that the spirits of those heroines, thus purged from sin, ceased from their transmigrations, and rejoined their husbands in Paradise without further probation. The practice of Suttee was never universal throughout India : it prevailed most in Bengal and Hindostan Proper, yet even there it was not general. ‘The Court of Directors, as usual, were formost in desiring the suppression of this horrible rite,—the Indian Government hesitating for some time to interfere so greatly with the religious ideas of the natives. ‘Thus supported at home, however, Lord William Beatinck, with high moral courage, issued a decree which banished the rite from the British territories; and such, since then, has been the zeal and tact of Colonel Ludlow and other of our officers at the native Courts, that an instance of Suttee is now almost unkown. The Meriah sacrifice—the immolation of a human being to propitiate the Harth-Goddess—was another startling rite which met us in India. But, unlike Suttee, it was a rite eleyate the social condition of the people by whom they were surrounded. Look, for instance at the case of Mairwara, the romantic tale of the civilisation of which dictrict has al- ready been set forth in the pages of Maga.* Thirty-five years ago we found there, in ihe very heart of India, a race of savage marauders—many of them fugitives from other States, men whom society had spewed out—with little or no regard for human life or liberty, practising infanticide, selling their mothers, agd committing every kind of atrocity without shame or remorse. In 1821 we subjugated the country of these freebooters ; and as early as 1827 Captain Hall, the excellent officer to whom the work of improvement | was confided, was able to report “ the complete and voluntary abolition of the two revolting customs, female infanticide and the sale of women ;” while the re-marriage of widows was , avided for, and the w.p-t forwg of slayery abolished, In 830 Captain Dizon suceeeded to the charge of the district, and under him the work of civilisation went on with a success that has left nothing to be desired. And by what measures have those savage tribes been reclaimed? Tn Mairwara, as elsewhere, the Ludian Government made the rude barbarians a * See ‘ Romance of Mairwara,”’ in the Number for February 1853. foreign to the true Hindoos and the tribes professing the | ralminical faith, and was restricted to certain half-savage | tribes in the mountainous recesses of the interior, remnants }ofa wavo of quasi-uboriginal population that had spread over the land before the Hindoos rose to supremacy. It was amidst the pestilential jungles on the Orissa hills that wo first came face to face with the Khonds, For nearly a ‘century we and they had dwelt within a short distance | of each other, without the least contact or mutual knowledge. (ln 1835, however, the British troops occupied Goomsar, and after a brief but spirited struggle, the Khond tribes of the hills were subjugated. Then it was that Lieutenant | Macpherson, when employed in the work of surveying at the foot of the hills, was struck with the strange religious and social life of these wild tribes, and, at the very outset, stumbled upon the painful fact that the tribes were in the habit of offering up to their deities human beings purchased or bred for the purpose! The Khonds believe that the Supreme Being, or God of Light, the source of all good, created for himself a consort, the Harth-Goddess, who, rebelling against him, became the source of all evil. Having * Seo “India under Lord Dathousi in the A Magazine, $ Rego, sagt — Nuwber of the ~ ema the Khonds thereafter diverge into of which believes that the God of the Karth-Goddess, and has since oying her as the agent of his will; ‘this much in common, ‘two great sects,— one Light utterly overcame “held her in thrall, emp! ‘whereas the other holds that unconquered, = ee ‘to man, is en! the dispensa : ako by ie ieee cf that antagon’sin = a prevent their emanation from the God of Light. oo ‘among this latter sect that the Meriah sacrifice nein ’ ‘as the only means of propitiating the evil goddess. The victims “ were furnished by a regular class of procurers, who either supplied them to order, or raised them on speculation. They were bought, perhaps, from their parents in hard famine-times, or they were kidnapped on the plains ; or were, perhaps, the children of the procurers themselves. Devoted often in their childhood to the Karth-Goddess, they were suffered to grow up as consecrated privileged beings, to marry wives, to hold lands, and flocks and herds, and other wordly goods,—cherished and endowed by the community for whom they were to die, and in spite of the tremendous doom that overshadowed them, leading happy lives to the last.’* ' The means of reclamation employed by the Indian Government here, and the difficulties encountered by its officers, were the same as those which we have already described in the case of the Mairs and the Bheels, But the success Of Macpuerson was no less gratifying and remarkable than that of Dixon and Outram. Providence helped the good work, and two unusually good seasons and rich harvests followed the first trembling renunciation of their bloody rite by the sacrificing sect of Khonds. The neighbouring Boad tribes, who likewise practised the sacrifice, viewed the result with wondering adwiration. They called us “ Boora Peunu’s people”~—-agents of the God of Light; and the re- sult was, that in a short time throughout all the Orissa hills, the Meriah sacrifice was abandoned, and the omnipotence of Tari Pennu, the evil Earth-Goddess, sank down into a delu- sion and a sham. r of happiness is vouchsafed ion of blessings in her own * Kaye, pages 498-9. : (To be continued.) See eesea ened eee —— ict nye htt ti Hf AH, ih | ‘Hye ““ Alliance Life and Fire Insurance Company” of LONDON ESTABLISHED BY ACT OF PARLIAMENT 1824, Capital, Five Millions Sterling. the Karth-Goddess is still, For Sale, FARM of 51 acres on the Malpeque Road, about 15 miles from Charlottetown. There are on the premises a al Dwelling House (32 x 22 feet) with back Eitcae attached, a Barn and Out-houses. 30 acres of the above are cleared and in a good state of cultivation, the remainder is burnt land. A capital stream of water rans through the premises. The farm is now in the oceupation of Mr. Jeremiah Coughlan, Tavern-keeper, and is a first rate stand, well worthy the atten- tion of parties wishing to enter on that business. ic the shove poe is not suld by the Ist day of April next, it will then » sold by Anction. Application to hé made to JOHN RIGG, Esq., Charlottetown, or to the subscriber, Lot 67, Feb. 16, 1857. lm MICHAEL MAY. For Sale HAT valuable piece of PROPERTY fronting on Kent Street, and nearly opposite the residence of the Hon. Coles. Application to be made early to Mr. Bensamin Davies, or to the subscriber, i, Charlottetown Royalty, Feb. 9. 3w CHARLES WELSH. raxO LET, the HOUSE and premises now. occupied by Robert A. Strong, corner of Great George and Kent Streets. Possession will be given on the Ist of May next. Apply to Feb. 9, 1857. THOM DAWSON. For Sale, HE leasehold interest in a FARM of 100 acres of land, on Township No. 22. There is a good Dwelling House and Barn, with other out-houses on Stet ie premises. About 35 acres of the above are cleared and ina hi¢h state of cultivation; the remainder is thickly covered with Firewood and Fence Poles. Near the house is a beautiful Spring and a capital Well of water. Any quantity of Marsh Mud for manure can be obtained on the front of the farm. Apply to Joun or Anprew Bex, New Mills, Hope River. Feb. 2, 1857. 4i ANDREW BELL. Business Stand at Summerside for Sale. MIE subscriber offers for sale his present property situated at the above place, near the public wharf. Stand it is unsurpassed by any that may be offered to the pub- lic for some time to come. It is pesos situated, and com- mands a splendid prospect of the beautiful harbor of ug, the Straits of Northumberland, and the Province of New Brunswick in the distance. Much might be said of this pro- rty in regard to business facilities, being within four or five bouts sail of Shediac—the terminus of the Railway, which will be in operation early next Spring—and connected with the latter port by means of regular Sailing Packets, and with Charlottetown by mail and stage conveyance, makes it one of the best business stands now offered to the public. It will be sold in one, two, or three lots to suit purchasers. ae _ plication is necessary. Apply to the Honble. P. WALKER, Charlottetown, or to the subscriber on the premises. Summerside, Feb. 2, 1857. tf P.M. POWER. Wheat County! VOR SALE, a FARM at Nail Pond, Lot 1, consisting of 50 acres, more or less, fronting on the Gulf shore, with the ex- ception of 10 acres all under cultivation, and well senced with cedar fencing all round. There is a public road runs through the centre of the farm, and a good Dwelling House on the premises; with a brook of As 2 Business Possession given immediately. It is under lease for 999 years at the of Is. per acre. Application to be made to Cuas. PALwER, Esq , Cascampee, Nov. 10, 1856. G. M. RYDER & Co. — Dwelling House and Land near Charlotte- _ town for Sale. Fook SALE, the newly built and commodious Dwelling April 14. CHARLES YOUNG. Agent for P. FE. 1. “NOVEMBER. 1856. NOVEMBER. \ Tr ray rey 4 NEW IMPORTATIONS Of Dry Goods, Groceries, &c. FOR THE FALL AND WINTER SEASONS. BNE subscriber begs to announce the arrival of his Fall and Winter Stock of BRITISH MERCHANDISE, comprising Dry Goods of all descriptions ; also, a select Stock of GROCERIES, all of which he will sell at the very cheapest cash charges, THOMAS KELLY, Store formerly occupied by Queen-street. 1 ut Bs _ Joseph McDonald, Esq. (till May 1.) Nov. 3. Old Stand, North side Queen-square. ~ HAVE just received the best assortment of Groceries and Liquors that is to be found in this City, including the follow- ing articles and others too numerous to mention:— TEA, in great variety Burning Fluid Dye Stuffs Crushed SUGAR Port WINE Earthen Jars Brown do. Sherry do. Pickles Puns. bright Molasses Madeira do. Sauce do. Jamaica Rum (old) Champagnedo. |) [Brushes do. Demerara do. Byass’ Pale ALE{| 3 Blacking Biscuit Leith ALE = Fig Tobaeco Coffee London PORTER } @ ° Orinooka do, Annapolis Cheese semon Syrup Flat do. Raisins Cider Digby Herrings Figs Malt Whiskey Candles Currants Dark Brandy Rice 200 barrels superfine Canada FLOUR, No. 1, new brand, (warranted.) Cash paid for Timothy Seed. Charlottetown, Nov. 24, 1856. Isl. 6m HUGH FRASER. No. 8. No. 8: #Qucen-street. REMOVAL! IIE subscriber has removed his extensive STOCK OF BRITISH AND FOREIGN GOODS, ex J. W., Elize-_ beth and Albion, to the Store formerly occupied by Mr. Gzorce Room, a few doors higher up, which premises he has re- modelled and refitted ; and having now increased facilities for the accommodation of his customers, he trusts to be favored with a continuance of their patronage. He also begs to intimate that he is daily expecting a further supply to complete his FALL IMPORTATIONS, all of which will be disposed of at the lowest cash prices. fa Observe No. 8, Queen-street. Charlottetown, Noy. 24, J. W. MORRISON. New Goods at Dodd’s Brick Store, IN POWNAL-STREET. UST RECEIVED per schooner “Albion,” from Boston, also, per schooner “ British Queen,” from Halifax, an extensive Stock of West India and American Goods, comprising in part—50 chests TEA, 20 half-chests and 50 boxes Tea, 10 puncheons MOLASSES, 5 hogsheads SUGAR, 50 boxes assorted Confectionary, 50 boxes Soap, 30 boxes Candles, 6 kegs Tobacco, 10 barrels Onions, 20 barrels Crackers (assorted), 20 boxes Cheese, 6 dozen Buckets, 6 dozen Brooms, 6 cases Clocks, 5 dozen Looking- glasses, a lot of Glass and Earthenware. Also—300 Franklin and Cooking STOVES (different patterns), all which will be disposed of at the lowest prices. Charlottetown, Nov. 10, eee es = THOMAS W. DODD, NEW GOODS, Fall 1856, 4iX “ Majestic,” from Liverpool, ‘ Obi,” from London, and recent arrivals from Boston and Halifax, the Subscribers have received upwards of 1000 Packages British & Foreign Merchandize, which they offer for sale at their usual low prices for prompt payment. Wholesale Customers supplied at low rates aa on liberal ame The assortment consists of 60 Chests prime Congou TEA, 2 cases Gala Plaids & Linseys, 7 Bales Carpets and Woollens, 1 do Silk and Straw Bonnets, 8 Cases and 3 bales Ready Made 1 Trunk Ladies’ Mantles, Clothing, 1 case Gloves and Hosiery, 15 Trunks Boots and Shoes, 1 do Jewellery & small wares 4 do. silks, silk dresses and ribbons, 50 boxes Soap, ; 8 Bales Gray, white and Printed 90 kegs White Paint, Calicoes, derrys and ginghams, 2 casks Oil, 1 cask Putty, 6 Bales assorted Cloths, 5 tins Copel Varnish, 10 Cases Ladies’ Dress Materials, | Boxes Ward’s washing Powder 2 do FURS, Paste Blacking, Chinese, 2 do Woollen Shawlg, Glenfield and Blue Starch, 1 do Polka Jackets and Sleeves, Bags Pepper, Alspice, Corks, 2 do Glazed Linings, Barrels Crushed Sugar . 15 Kegs * Hall’s” Powder, Logwood, Rive, ; 30 Packages Ironmongery, 85 Bags Cut Nails, A large quantity of AMERICAN GOODS. House in Charlottetown Royalty, late the residence of the Hon. Charles Hensley, together with eighteen acres of Land adjoining. The Dwelling House coutains—Dining Koom, Drawing Koom and Study; two Kitchens, with Store-rooms, &c.; and Nine Bed-rooms. There isalso Stables, Coach-house, Root-hotse, Pump, &c.,on the premises. The dia- tance from Charlottetown is rather less than one mile Aiso to let from year to year, or for a term of years, as agreed upon, — Pasture Lots in Charlottetown Royalty, near the above Dwelling ouse. For Terms of Sale and Lease apply to the subscriber at the Attorney General’s Office, Colonial Building, Charlottetown. July 30. . JOSEPH HENSLEY. For Sale, “par valuable Building in Queen-street, known as the CITY DRUG STORE, together with the land upon which it is erected. The premises are at present leased from year to year, and will be sold subject to such lease. This valuable property is too well known to need further de- scription. —ALSO— Five hundred acres of valuable WILDERNESS LAND, im one block, situate on Township No. 49. This tract is situate on the boundary line of the Township, and runs to the Pis- quid River— is well watered and covered with timber trees, rincipally hardwood, and worthy the attenion of speculators. or particulars, apply PS W. H. POPE. Charlottetown, Dee."15, 1856. (all papers tf.) GREAT BARGAINS. ‘PO BE SOLD, that very desirable and beautifully situated COTTAGE, nearly opposite the Hon. Baa C. Young’s residence, and now occupied by W. E. Clark, Esqr., haying a front on PitzRoy-street of 84 feet, and 75 feet on Prince-street, with a large BACK BUILD- ING, now used as a Cabinet-maker’s shop. This property, if not sold by the First of Marcu next, will then be sold in Lets to suit purchasers. . cat ALSO, TO LEASE, or a number of years, as may be agreed upon, that large new two story DWELLLING OUSE with SHOP rol oe wt situated in Water-street, opposite the residence of R. s worth, Esqr., and now occupied by the subscriber. Possession given on the’ first day of May next. For further particulars apply to the subscriber on the premises. ebruary 2, 1857. THOMAS WILLIAMS. To Sailmakers and others. HE subscriber offers for Sale his present SAILMAKING _™ BUSENESS, with everything requisite for carrying on the same. ‘This Business, in an industrions man’s hands; will yield Loft for a number of years, as may be agreed upon; An earl call will be necessary to secure it, "Two or oolee of Oeken, dividend deciared the last year was 5 per cent., with very good investment for capital. ebruary 2, 1857. THOMAS WILLIAMS. Spring, requests all persons to whom he may to sen requests all persons that may be indebted to him, by Note otherwise, to call and settle the same before the ist of “April next, as all accounts not settled at that date will be handed over to an Attorney for recoyery. February 2, 1857, THOMAS WILLIAMS. Liverpool to Charlottetown direct. EGULAR TRADER, A 1, Clipper Sb “ MAJESTIC ;” thoroughly” Rea Wek eo the 15th nee be despatched the Ist April. fas superior accommodations for Cabin Passengers. tinuance of patronage solicited. inde For particulars please apply to Messrs. D. Cannoy, Son Co., 52 South Cast aa 2 rpool ; or - . W.W. LORD & Co., Feb. 2, 1857, HG. 5i. Charlottetown, P. E. I. London to Charlottetown direct. AS usual, a first class SHIP will sail as above om the Ist of April, 1857. 3, Road Lane, London; or to Feb. 2,1857. 6i DANIEL J. ROBERTS, Ch. Town. ey THE EXAMINER IS PRINTED AND PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY © BY EDWARD WHELAN, - AT HIS OFFICE, KENT-ST., NEARLY OPPOSITE MR. COLES’ BREWERY+.. Price Fifteen Shillings per Annum} Payable Hali\ ean. Queen-square, Jan. 12. D, & G. DAVIES IN ADVANCE, water running through the property, a short distance from the House, _ , ee wad 20s i ; » ay a very handsome revenue. The purchaser can haye the Saij Also—A SHARE in the ‘Temperance Hall Company. ‘The prospect of paying next year from 7 to 8 per cent,, being a HE subscriber, intending to leave the Islandin the ensuing be indebted . in their accounts for settlement ;. and he, therefore, .. repaired newly metalled under the inspection of t the owner — at Liverpool ; E. Nownay, Commander ; ready for | For Freight, &¢., apply to KEAL & ROBERTS, ‘ P SERRE ate SS seen _— i ? 7