I-lASZARD'S GAZETTE, .MAY 23. TIIPIBLIOB. To run Eni-ran or l|ass.ann's Gasrr-rs. Dear sir,—-You will oblige by giving a lace Iliiyour y_ournal to_ the accompanying .;.¢a.ii;,.i in orination furnished by a Firm extensively in _the manufacture of alcoholic liquors “L ll'°|'II|I- and the remarks thereon by the Editor of the first yournal of the sate (the Alta California) who is not all euineecsd with e Teiii rance Movement ex as an in peudentyournal. Myrcason for re ting itis tliist_l conceive, tht the principle neolvgd in this important question, S all we destroy Rum, or shal_ Rum destroy us! is the same in all countries, where the manufacture and sale of it is.countena_nced by Law, and therefore any _thing said in connection therewith should be interesting. It will_bo perceived too, that the arguments of those on god in the traflic are the sonic everywhere. at to test the sincerity of these gentlemen, Law is required. Califor- nia has passed such a Law, not so stringent as Temperance men would like. (The exce tion being in favour of the manufacture of i/’Vine from the grape of California growth.) Yet a great st? is gained and Temperance men re- yoie_e. e have every reason to hope that the action of the friends of the Temperance Re- form will be such, as to induce our Le is- lature to pass a Law for this Island, which shall remove this Death spot from amen us. Yours, &.c., . J. T. P CONSUMPTION OF SPIRITS. Messrs. J. G. Dows & Co., who are engaged in the business of distilling, communicate to the Herald some important statistics of the manufacture and consumption of spirits in this State. The capital employed is thus stated : Two distilleries in Marysville, $20,000 each $40,000 One distillery in San Jose 30,000 Six distilleries in San Francisco 305,000 Total $75,000 _ The same amount is supposed to be invested in brewcries—enough at any rate, in the o i- nion of Messrs. Dows & bo.,“to make t a total investment in distillerics and breweries seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The like sum is required, at the lowest estimate, to stock and carry these establishments along, and employment of, say, two hundred and fifty labouring men daily. “ The average consumption of domestic (dis- tilled) liquors in California for the last four years has ii full five thousand gallons per To produce that amount of liquor here, wil absorb one hundred and ten thousand pounds of barley per day: and to supply the malt liquors for the State will require as much more, making two hundred and twenty thou- sand unds of barley per day.” We l ! is it not time to stop this? live thou- ssndgollons a day! That’s the secret of nine- tenths of _thc murders, thefts, robberies and arsons. Five thousand gallonsa day mp be sport to the manufacturers, but it is dcat to t e people! Five thousand gallons a day!- let us see what it is worth. Suppose it will average 75 cents a gallon for the last four cars, at the wholesale, it would amount to 3,750 perday, and to $1,368,750 per year, and in the four years to $5.475,000. But if retailcd b the drink, allowing three drinks—at three ts_—to the half pint, which soalsers tell us is a high avcra e, we have expended for drink daily 330,00 , which amounts to $10,950,000 P" 70”; Ind $41_i,800.000 for the at four years! occupying with idleness over /iiiir thou- sand bar-keepers, and inducing the idleness and of from eight to ten thousand bar- room louugers, that probably would, otherwise, have been doin something for themselves or their fimilies., ill Messrs. Dows & Co. tell us what the pee le have t for this, and whether this pro table tra c has murdered anybody, or smitten any intellect with the horrible’ blight of mania, or sharpened the assassins da gcr, and nerved the murderous hand!_ Our tate Prison Inspectors tell us that nine-tenths _of the convicts are sent there fpr crimes_co_iiimittei_i under the influence of liquor. or indirectly induced by it! The mur- der spots thick scattered over our land, reek- iug with unaveu blood, and the disconsolate, dark-looking hundred at Point San Quentin are the terrible answers to the value of the liquor traflc! Count it up in dollars, as if money could pay for the mischief! The advantages to farmers. and pork and beef-caters, is all moonshine The cash for grain from the distilleriec never helped as man hriners as the whiskey ruined, and the " s l-fed” pork and beef never supplied half the number that the whiskey trafic has starved! Is it not time to arrest this stream of death! Ought not the community to purge iieslfigc any cost, from the horrible effects 0 the trallic! We would go in for paying for the stock of liquors on hand, not wanted for mechanics and medicine, and plunging the balance into the sea. Messrs. Dows ck Co. are fully sensible of the evils of the trafiic, and have generally helped to both to the rinci le‘of in -makla ' good of tbepcomiiiuni if this .5 £ would_be regarded as dly an we in is complimentary, (like the comhndafin ofthe Lor to the unjust stewartd) we would pursue this point futher. But it may give uneoessary: oflencc. Solet it pass. Wes: gntleipen sa . c oaoto 'ctto elegislatiirepaseln the Maine or Priiliibitory Li uor law, provided it an be made operative an positively exclude all liquor tom the State; but we think, that can hardly be done. If it can, we will not complain ofthe acts of the Legislature. We are quite willin to lose all our iiiveehnent, if every erson in t e State will positively abandon iquor. It would be very hard, however for us manufacturers to be stopped, and allow the United States to admit liquors throu h the Custom House and then be sold, whic they would be, clandestinely, and probably no legal vigilance could prevent it. The matter is different with us. We could not manufacture clundcstinely. if we keep our works in opera- tion, everybody must know ii, and we would be daily subjected to persecution under the contemplated law. his is pleasant. It seems fair, and has really something of the high demand of equal rights on its side, and it concedes that a prohi- bitory liquor law which was edectual would be just the thing for the country. This is con- siderable for men who are manufacturing 18,- 000 lbs barle (i. e. 1000 llons,) into whiskey per da , on have $50, permanent capita in the usiness. No man, however, can doubt that such a law is wanted, and it do ads with the people to say, whether it shall c effectual or not But the reasonin above is more spe- cious than sound. Strip of all its shadows, it amounts to a moderate demand to share in the profits of the havoc of morals, destruction of health and life. If murder is oin on, want an equal privilege of doing it or t e sake pt‘ the louder. Here 1 s the necessity of the aw. for money. Moral suasion will not c any Ion r with them, and while the tralfic is so con essedly bad according to the admission of those engaged in it, let the Legislature put a stop to it. Here is a strong intimation, and any one who knows the men, knows it means all it so s, that a 'ust and e al extirpating law wou d be heartl y respects by those most deeply alfectcd by it. Let the Legislature act boldly then, on the right, and give us a little lega suasion with which to doctor the perceptions of other men who make gold their god, and do not stop at sending‘ mu titudes to an ignominious grave, saddle the public with paupers and curse the land with crime, if they can make moue by it! Shall the traflic fostered? or shal it stopped! Let the question come fairly to the people, and let the sovereigns decide it. GLEAIIIGI I301 LATE PAPERS. A Mormon Cotoivv.-—'l‘he shi Siddons, says the Philadelphia North merican, which arrived at this port on Friday night from Liverpool, had on board 425 Mormon. emigrants destined, as the marks upon their bag age indicated, for “ Salt Lake ’ y." They were composed of British families, and all appeared well dressed, healthy, and intelligent. The women, es- pecially, had that fine, robust, rosy, British, look about them, of which we hear so much. They were to proceed immediately, by railroad and steamboat, to the Western frontier, and there start overland for their new home in the valley of the Salt Lake, 9 fast gathering a populous and flourishing community, mostly accumulated from the European hive of nations. The New York Sun sa , thata company is soon to be formed in t at city, for the m_auii- facture of paper from sawdust and shavings, from which it has been found by experiment, that the most beautiful paper may be made. It is estimated, that sawdust can be urchascd for tlve‘dollars per ton, apd that t e process through which it_will in the production of 3235 "vi~'il."2£.°.°.§.'.‘.'."l. .-?a’.°.§..'i".';. ‘,’.T.'i°,‘.’ ‘ii. iii process of its manufacture, by acids, and after- wards (1 through an operation pimilar to that through which the gpcr in use is subycct- ed in its _preparation._ in the sawdust, tur- pentine is extracted in quantities suflicicnt make it an obyect of labor, and the acid used in reducing the sawdust to pulp is purified into c o its original strength. with so only of about roimoiv Mronusc wire was l'iiass.—The ten per cent. Na _ editors of all the Paris yournals have been sum- moned to the Ministry of the Interior, and told that in flllllteiblle would not poi-‘ipittcd to ublish an nte igence respec mg is move- iiieuts of thii French Ar ,svea_should ii relate merely to the transfer o a regiment from one modify it. We sincerel hope they have watered .the whiskey well! '1.‘ at wosld be consonant on will be found, who will do an thing H where the leaders of the Mormons seem 5 feed: example, Whether they were not to be at liberty to from the Journal de Touloafi-kparagra be which that journal was in the by t of pa lishin about the military uiovmueuts in that rt. he answer was, that the ‘Ionian Journs would no longer be allowed to blink these graphs; that the prefects been eujoine by a ministerial circular is enforce the same secrecy in the provinces which the Government was determiu to enforce in the metropolis: and that if by any accident, military news of the kind alluded to should ap- pear in a provincial newspaper, the Paris press would nevertheless not be at liberty to aiiepipt it The editors were at the same time enjoin , not to reports word of what might be said about the possible journey of the Emperor to the Crimea. Know-No-riimo-isiu.—'I‘he Know-Noihicgssp- pear io be a cam ing ihe day in all pans of the sine. Maine has elected s Know-nothing and Temperance Meyer. The Boston Pilot is respon- sible fnr the following: “ Going Harm.-.——0ne hundred and eighty persons, inosily Irish, sailed in the Chariot of Fame, which left this port on the 26th uli. We cannot wonder, that they leave a country, where they expected a happy home, and return again to ihe otd land. The persecution of old En land is nothing compared io the treatment a arge number of the Irish receive in the New England Suites. Better to curve in Ireland, than to come to New-England to be persecuted and abused." Tris Dine-rsii BETWEEN Paine: EDWARD lsuun, AND Nova Scorn.--Our resders may recollect Ihst in March last, the mail best, from Cape Tormcniinc for Prince Edward Island, wiih screw of four men and three passengers. en- countered a snow-storm, and becsme so embedded in the lolly, caused by the snow, when wiihiii half a mile of the Island shore, ihat she was unable to reach it, and ihe party were exposed to the sciion of the elements for three days, without any food, except the flesh of s small dog, which one of ihe passengers, Mr. sir, had with him, which they killed, drank his blood and cat the flesh raw. Mr. Hsszaid, ii medical student, return- ing from the United States, died from exposure. end the others were more or less frozen. The boziimansgcd to reach the Nova Scoiis side of ihe Gulf, nesr Wsllsce, and the unfortunate survivors were humanely received b the inhabi- ianis, who sdininisiered every relic wiihln their power.—Sincc then, Mr. Weir has resided wiih A. McFsrlane F.sq.,si Wallace, where he has received over] kindness and attention. He is still labouring under ihe effects of the severe exposure, and he desires publicly to express ihrougli a friend who has recently returned from Wallace, his grateful acknowledgments to Mr. and Mrs. Mcfsrlsne, for the kindness he has received at their hands. Weir is a resident of Bangor, but has many friends here who would be iilsd to hear of his rcstorsiiou io hcslih.—Ceni. to ‘ iioita, svvizsr iioiss.’ This svrecl and delightful song derives much of its iniprcseiveuee liom circumstances which ihe ussiies of New York city have nearly destroy- . How can any body sing this song,who hssjust got seiiled in one dwelling, and expects to remove to snoihsr in a few months l it is impossible to feel the sentiment of the song in such circum- sisncss. One must become sttschsd not only to parents, brothers, sisters, &.c., in the fsmily,hui the surrounding of the place, the grass lot, the fences, ihe shrubs, and every feature of i e scene must be dsngerroi ped upon our heart, before we can experience the full meaning of ihe word 0 Q. cme. li is sad to think that a vast proportion of our city population have no home, and no idea of wine! home is. When they speak of home, they inesn ihe place where. for the present, they sleep and islis breakfast. The dear delights, the sweet kindncases given and received, the electrical sym- psihics that flow from heart to heart, by which everything in end around ihe domestic fold is ssiiciified and made heauiiful and lovely-are unknown by them, unless by chance they can lcolr back to a childhood spent in the bosom of some country dwelling. where the care and pressureof business and ambitious enterprise found no es- IFIDCO. We are losers of the sweetest and holiest of influences by this ceaseless rush of business snxisiy, and this annual change of residence coin- bincd with ihe hsbii of fixing tbe resideoceso far from the scene of our daily labor, that we can spend only ihe nights with our household. Whsi musi be ihe eifeci uppii a men's mind of a system of living, which o on him no induce- iiieni to lsnt s flower, or shrub, or use before his dwelling or ioiniprove or besuiif the reinlses, becsiise he knows he cannot enjoy t e s _vsnisgc_; s syicm which takes him from his dwelling in his business in ,ihe morning before his children are swske, and which permits him to return not until may have again mind to sleep, and not aim! he is iocwesry to cxclisn e a word oi pleasant con- verse with his wife so others of the household! e w great siitfsrer from scrofiila for a number of years, and finally all parts of his body broke out into sores And yet, how can any man expect to be, we will not say, happily, but even tolcrsbly, civilised, who is not daily and habitually baptised with the sweet influences of a happy, united Home? None of us can sflbrd to lose these influencs._ There is so much of the savage ia\II,‘and in ihe wcal‘ Ind tear of ihe great ‘.22 .. .... - . .- s cg, i n _ the li ' logs er-mud, with ‘our lieu usiiiskiiig musicie'c_ursaIs_ , _ ing hours in palaces of ivory and go d. .,_u,_orlI_'ef selfishness busiaOeI—-lion ‘U lo IId:h',$It is wholly iiipalaforlle live beyond tn‘ list; in. ‘a cabin of Old lfilllte sroiind defile sleep- For ' Be it ever so homely, there's no place like Home.’ But until we can compose a reform in our city ems influence." manner of life, which divorces husbands and wives, and separates fathers and children_during all the waiting, living hours of their existence, I3. us not ihink of singing Home, Sweet Home.- gun. -is--———<--—-1-1" Ho1loway’s Ointment and Pill: astonishing Rem- dies for Scrofulii.—llr. Henry Judd, of Vancouver, as in s most iiliirming sisie of health, he had been a rendering him an object ofkcrror to every one; he tried some of the most reputed remedies known, but they did not touch his complaint, and in the greatest alarm be consulted in friend so to what course he ought to adopt, when Hollowsy’s Ointment and Pills, were recommended. which he commenced using, and by persevering with these remedies for a short time, he yvalseperfecily cured, after every other remedy had ai nssznnnm Gazzrrn “Wednesday, my as, 1855. Mr. McAuslsnd’s letter on the subyot of bringing the water of Spring Park well into Charlottetown, will be perused with interest by those who wish to see the comfort and health of the pee 1c of the town well attended to. The ori ins paper was written by Mr. Ic- Auslan in the car 1849, and given to the Hon. Charles oung, by whom it was some time since handed to the writer. As in these days, nothing succeeds without agitation, we have determined to begin in time, and keep the public alive to the absolute necessity of having a copious su ply of d, pure, wholesc_ine water, not on for t e urposes of drinking and cookin , at for ot or domestic pur- poses, as we as having a ready agent in case of fire. in order to make a commencement, we handed back to Mr. McAusland the original article, and begged lu'm to five an ebridgqmeat of it. In the year 1849, when it was written, Mr. hlcitusland was merely a passing _trnveller who might never set his foot again witlim the precincts of the town, yet, so iiiii_ch was be attracted by the beauty of the spring II‘. It! adaptability to the so ply of the toqn. 311“ gratuitously sin loy iiiiselfin hhneeurus of levels, for the purpose of ascerhinin; to what extent it mi ht be made useful. _ We think that e public are under an _obliga- tion to him for his disinterested anxiety to benelita place of which he then little thought of ever becoming a deaisen To -nu llniros or Knuth’! Gsssns. 8is.—Baviog been requested, by the‘ Hpn. Charles Young, in Sept. 1849,tc visit ‘Spring Park, and ive him my opinion_rcspecting the extents an pi-acticabi ity_of taking that Spring into town ; the followinghis an_ abstract 0 report then made, whic Report has been in your possession, till handed to me some short 'me agoI:—_ _ 1h .- siIt,—. ii compliance wi ' ur made a partial survey of the Rn-ibg, and_ Beg now, to submit the result of my-_ ob _rvatious. Partial as the surveys has been, and ittle as I know of the waste and resources of this coin- munity,l have seen enough to enable me to arrivphat two in: "ant conclusions. :13”; that e ing res to, is as pure wa res I have svirsesu, hes from lime contains a quantit of lixed air and if brou t into town would lie a great acquisition to a public. second, from the present a psarsuce o Hie Spring, alters season of great sought, 1 should judge you would have suleient quantity to supply the lower section of the town with one of the first necessaries of ii . _ I would therefore suggest, that a Reservoir be constructed at the fountain-bead, which may be either built of wood, brick. or stone, the sise may be an after consideration. we then lay a main pipe of suleieut sise, say 7 inches from the Spring to Mr. Brenan’s corner, down Queen Street, branch‘ closet and west to Powiial, Great George, and Water Streets, and would recbmmcnd that the cross streets be supplied with small branch pipes and tire lugs, which would be of eficisnt service in ihe event of tire. This section of the town may be termed the low service and supplied on the vitation princi la. The following is a roug calcula- u'on , the cost to so py this _sectlon of the town. Reservoir an main pipe from tho SPf.in‘j‘$o Mr. Brcna_n’s corner, with small rt of France to another. A representative of one of the papers inquired, by way of asking There is no licme inlbenee moulding and mellow- log that man's heart. mains and branch pipes’ in main and cross frsqiiest, I.