I-IASZARD’S GAZETTE. MAY 9- Illied armies occupy all the ground that the desire to occup before Sebastopol, and till; all1ed’l‘ieets enjoy undisputed rule in the Iilack Sea. llie Russian Plcnipotentiaries particularly object to the closing of the Straits. '1‘ni-key as made serious objections (in the private‘ meet1ngs)_against the opcnning ol' the Straits, and is indisposcd to consent to it revision of’ tho treaty of 18-11, if the consequence of that revi- Iton is to be_tlic recognition of the right of every power in the world to pass the liar- danelles and Bocpborus with ships of war. consequence to be apprehended from such a stipulation would be the Turkish Minister says) that the indepen ence, and even the ex- istence, ofTurkey would be at an end. on- 1-tantinople would become a mere coinin.-r.-ial town open to all comers, and exposed defence- Iess to every insult. The principle of closing the Dardanelles is, say the Turks, as ancient as the domination ofthe Ottoiuansut Constanti- nople, and is it consequence of the simultaneous possession of the Euro an and Asiatic provin- ces situated upon the anks of the btraits. -: ._ FINAL DETERMINATION 011‘ THE CZAIK. It is, perhaps. a singular incidence that we shall receive the intelligence of the final determination of the Czar, during the visit to England of the Emperor of tho Fr».-ncli. "ho certainty of our having to wage together a great European war maybe announced, perliii ps, at the very uiomcnt, that our Queen is investing the Emperor Napoleon with the insignia of the highest Il(‘-nt‘-ill’ she has to bestow; or the news ofpeace iiiiglit be proclaimed, as Victoria and her Imperial .-‘.ll;.' pace the transcpt of ;~'_vden- ham, surround.-il by the arts and works of .-cncc. The i!‘Sl:‘llCiI()l‘|S of Prince Gor:.-i-lia- ‘offend of.'«!. 'i‘itull'c:innot rcacli\'icnn:i. be 1“-.n-e the 15111. mail in-.in_v not arrive there till. perhaps, the 20th. The most probable _dat«- is, perhaps, the 17131 or 13th, until wliic‘i day uhlie aiixicty must postpone its I1IlplhIll'I‘l(‘C. Vliatevcr conferences may lie held previously to that date will have reference to lL.i:1tl.ul'8 of compiiratively niinor iiiiportaiico. '1'iii: ” \'icoizors" I’r.osi:ci'rio.v or -nit: W_m.-—- The I\llllls'.‘lI.(‘llIté of the I-Iister vac:itio;i are draiviiig to :2 close, and, as far as appcaraziccs 0, the c»ii'it:‘y seems :is easy and contented as its lcgisl.itor;s. (Ioiisideriiig what has lir.',.p~ii- ed during the List winter, and what may he liappeiii-is; even now, this state of things is to us sur_nrisiii-_:. The following is the present stall of til 3 ‘i‘i':ti'-oiliso :— Lord l’.i:iiuui-o, Secretary of State, Iaill up with (lie ;,ro:¢(. Mr. 1’ccl, l‘.irliatuent:iry Under-Secretary, admit. Col. absent. Mr. Roberts, Permanent Under-Secretary. di.m1is.v:¢l. Total ofcfllctives, Mr. Ilawcsl .' ! The ofiice is “ working itself” like its sister establishment ofthe Colonies, which adminis- tors the iifliiirs of fifty States by a Secretary at Vienna and an ’nder-Secretary in Ireland. Government seems determined to put doivn opular clamour by a system of defiance. .01)- Jections are made to the preference of aristo- cratic connexions to merit. anda cry is raised for new men; so Lord Palmerston makes a Government more aristocratic and more exclu- sive than any we have known before. 'I‘hc system of our public oflices has been subjected to much unfriendly criticism,so, by way of defence, the oflicials of our two most important departments desert them in a body, and leave them to the care of the clerks 1 . lunda y, Permanent Under-Secretary, SPORTING AT THE c/iiir.—Dog-hunting" has been " open ” for some days past, and the ours of Karanyi have had several hard but successful runs for their lives. o-day ‘* our” first spring meeting took place and was numcroiisly attend- ed. The races came oil on a little piece of un- dulating ground, on the top of the ridges near Karunyi. iind were regarded with much interest by the Cossack pickets at Kamara and on (‘an- robert's hill. 'l‘liey evidently thought at first that the assemblage was connected with some military demonstration. and gallo ed in a state of excitement to and fro, but it is to he liopcdlously b,dd,,,g it u go hang 3 can‘. they get a clearer notion of the real character ,-,.,.,-ea“; 1;,,,[,s_w There of the proceeding, ere the sport was ovcr-—In the ¢i,o,,gm upon what we], midst ofthe races, 11. party of 12 Russians were (;,,,.c,,,,,,e,,t seen approaching the vidette on No. 4, Old Rc- 1.; doubt, in the valley. The dragoon fired his car- I be true to “self-_ bins, and ten of the men turned round an fled, and when the picket came up to the man they found two descrters had come in. One of them was an ollicer; the other had been an ofiicer, but had suffered degradation for ,, politi- cal causes” They were both Poles and the ex-oflicer spoke French and German fluently and well. They expressed great satisfaction at their escape ; and the latter said. “ Send me» wherever you like, provided I never see llussial again. ’'—they stated that they liaddeccived the; men who were with them into the belief, that. the vidette was one of their own outposts, and.‘ as they befonvred to ii. party that had only just‘ arrived, they iclieved it was so, and advanced boldly, till the drngoon fired on them, whenl the discovered their mistake and fled. As the j Po es were well mounted, they dashed on towards our post; the Cossacks gallopcd down to try and cut them ctI', but did not succeed. On bein t.-.l;cu to Sir Colin Cain bell the 5009 sent back to the Russian lines, for, as they did not belong to them, they did not wish to be at- cused of theft. Sir Colin granted the request, and the horses were taken to the brow of the hill and set free, when they at once gnllopcd ell‘ towards the Cossacks. '1'lie races proceeded after this little episode just as usual, and sub- sequently the company reiiolvcditselfinto small as. packs of dog-hunters.-7 nn Fiioii oI.\lll-'5 C00l‘E.'l, lsr Rout. Dmioooxs, wno -riiixits WI‘. (.‘.\N sriu. w.ii.iioi> rm: Rvssmxs. —“1\'ear Biln. Clara, March 14.—I never enjoyed better health at home than I do in this country, wnicli is one of the greatest blessings we have ll’.‘l‘0. I must acknowlcd c we have had fighting here most fearful to re ate. I can clearly say we have been for a fortnight to ether and never hiid it dry thread on our sick.-, with scarcely a bit of shoe to our feet, and the mud half way up to our k-ices; but thank God, the worst of the time is over now. We liavo good boots and good clothes, which will keep out it good storm. _\lo were all turned out this morning, expecting an attack to be made on usliy the Iliissiuns. good from. Hliptiiiy-ed of them, to attack liala. not panic to try thr,-it tlicy imiil-l l‘!l\": met with it warm l‘m’t‘j_‘~IIilll from our l-attcrii-s which we have erected. ' have got wooden lions-.-s to live in now duriiig the fine wcatlicr. We ought to have had them- good things a long time ago, and that won have been the means of’ saving the lives of llll.tlI_V' thoiisniids of our poor couiriules: they have lcsseiied our ariny greatly. But with all our, losses we can still - wallop ’ the Russians, for their superior iiuiiiliers." l Fiioii SI-ZIIGIl.'.\!\"I'II0l1FR'I' Btciv'ri.Bv, Rent. As- TlLl.l£ll\'.-“ B.-fore Schastopol,—-I don't care what I stiffer and go through while I am here? so that Iain able to hear it all, also that we_ beat the llussians, and I live to come to old’ Englaiiil iigiiiii all safe and sound; and I live ‘ in hopes of so doing, in fact, I feel sure ofdoing so, but we have a great deal to do yet to beat ; tho llussiaiis. If I had to live on in bareg rations only every day, I should not have been E so well as I am at resent. Our rations are‘ daily llli. of salt lieefor pork, 11b. of biscuit, cofli-c iii-:,lit and iiiorning, and now we have got some potatoes, perhaps tliroe tiuies a week, and we find them to do us a great deal of 0d ; but 1 have lived on salt meat and biscuit for so long that I cannot take it now, so I bu bread, butter, &c., &c., with my pay, and I think it is that that has brought me round so well, but we have to pay very dear for evertliing we have to buy. The 1-‘rcneli bake their own bread,and we buy a loaf of‘ them when ivo can, butwe have to give 33 0:1 for it loafof not more 3 lbs. weight, and if we send to Bala Clava, and that is about seven miles from our camp, we give 2s t'or a loafnot iiioro than ljlb. weight. and glad to get them at that price, butter (salt of course), is 3s lb., lfiiiglisli cheese, {is 1b., so or, s ., flour, Is 111., porter. :2s 6d a bottle, it out a pint and a l.a‘.f in the bottle, ale, ls (id, if they call italc, I call it small beer. I heard the other tI:l_\‘ that there was some red lierrings to be got, and I tliouglit I should like one, so I sent for ore, and tTie_v only charged 4d for it, and it was a very small one 1 Oranges are also 4 each, so what money we do get it does not go liar for a few coiiifoi-ts, but I find they do me _r__v.:e-.1, and as long as I have money and there is such things to he got I will get them.” Ciiooxso A.\'D Frsi-ic-oi-s Ponicr or rm: Ars- TRl.\N (.l(\‘.‘EltNlll£N‘l‘.—-Iizrrlln is at this moment inun-Litcd with the most alarming accounts of the sanitary comlition of‘ the Austrian army 0 ol-serv'.iti.iii on the Polish frontier. The dra- goon rcgiuient “ Iiavai-Ia" is re resented as reduced to it more skeleton: the infantry regi- meiit “ the King of l3el_t:iiiii1” is said to have lostiiioro than half its numbers by sickness. All tlzcsc reports come from Vieiizia, and appear to be of a scini-ollicial character. The time must be near approacliing when Austria. is bouiid in l.ntiour to draw the sword. But all. he aiitecodcnts of Austria have evinced an‘ anxious desire to put oil that evil day as long as possible. This being the case, it is with some- thing nearly allied to incrcdulity that men lis- ten to inflated accounts ofn dreadful epidemic breaking out, at such a critical moment, in the ranks ofnn army hitherto believed by all to be in the enjoyment ofa fair average state of health. '1!e alleged sickness in the Austrian army bearsu most suspicious resemblance to the politic sickness of the Earl qfNor!liumber- land in Shakspcarc's “Henry IV.,” when the nobles in arms against that monarch were counting upon the E31-l's assistance in the field. If.-\ustria plays us false in this emergency, it will be no more than Austria has done before on similar occasions. Since the days of King John, the policy of the House ofllapsburg has been ever triiiiiiiiiig and sliifting—cver charac- terised by 11. readiness to listen to the last plau. sihle speaker, and to sacrifice its honour and its permanent interests for the attainment of some petty immediate advantage by crooked means. It is one consolation that the Austrian lflovernnicnt has uniformly been the greatest sufferer by its own indirectness. Other nations lean afford to look with scorn on the paltry .Jcsuitical trickster, and dismiss it, contemptu- skia on its is little time to waste a versatile and timid o. e main concern of English Government should may ngland is that tho 'Lsvaii.u1i.s Armiit.—A very laughable affair has just happened. An English ofliccr, now it prisoner in Sebastopol, had a letter sent him from ayoung lady in England tothe effect that she hoped, when he took Mcnscliikofl‘ prisoner, that he would send her a button from his coat, for her to keep as a relic.” The letter was yesterday for- warded by it flag oftruce into Scbastopol, with other letters for prisoners now in the enemy's hands. This letter fell into Mens- cliikofI"s own hands, of course to be read ere delivered. On coming to the above passage, he immediately cuta button from his coat and sent it out under a flag oftruee, to be conveyed to the lady, with u re- mark to the following effect :—-“That he had uoi ea 1’ t of being tulxen prisoner. but rather tian isuppoint 11 younglady of I O iimsclf before that time arrived.” You may rely that the circumstance has actually occurred. The Nuremberg Correspondent contains a letter from Vienna which states that in well- inforincd quarters it rumour rovails thatthc I'Ill1p-'ll'0l’ .\apoleon is to visit t int city after lils visit to lnndun: also, that the Emperor Francis Joseph and Queen Victoria will at the some giiiio visit his Majesty at Paris during the exhi- ition. Judge Ilaliburton, author of“Sam Slick," elc., is at present on 11 visit to his son-in-law, the Ilcv. J. Iliinbridgc Smith, at Ranby, Lin- colnsbirc. The Nova Scotia Gazette contains a Proclama- tion dissolving the resent General Assembly. —Writs have been issued for a new election, returnable on the 12th June. simple a request, he would fulfil her wish 1. vessels if persevered in, must insure war, and to urge on him that, if he values cases with the United States, he uiust cease sue practices us must be resisted bv {U700 0‘ “ms ".7 um‘ l5°' vernnicnt. at all iiizurds. And further. 10 assure him, that he may dismiss alI_leavs of t‘llI_e successful departure of lillibustering expe I- tions so long as Franklin Pierce remains in the Presidency. We take it for granted, further, that Cnmiiiodore Mctfaiulcy has orders after having delivered the message. N10 ll_ll’3'“°° °i which we mention above. 30 P°""‘" “° ”,'°"° firing of shot over and and around American vessels pursuin lawful commerce on the high seas—in the Ga f." HoiminLr.!—'I‘he New York Journal of Coimnercc says, that some of the large hotels in that city now pay six or seven hundred dollars per annum to keep the cockroaches, Si.c., from occupying the entire biuldiiig. In one ofthcse establisliiiients, the smell of them may be perceived in every part of the house, making them a nuisance ofthe worst description. THE SHIPPING OF THE WORLD. Several colisions between _ships have taken place olfour oivn coasts, and _it has been stated on authority that such collisions are much _on the increase. Whether the increased_ and in- creasing number of vessels which navigate the ocean was taken into consideration_in making the assertion does not a pear. but it ought to be. According to the o cial returns, the total number of vessels that entered and left our ports on coasting and foreign voyages, includ- ing repeated entrances and departures by the same vessels, and, of course including foreign vessels, was in- Number of ships. Tonnage. 1844 338,339 32,420,337 1854 342,854 42,573,369 Increase in 1854 4,815 10,147,032 The increase in the number of ships was_in the ten years only 1 4-10 per cent., but the in- crease in the tonnage that went to and fro was 31; per cent. Tliree elements conihinc continu- ally to increase the chances of collision—tlie increase in the number of ships, their reater size, and their more rapid movement; ut all may be counteracted by increased skill and care in captains: and probably in the end It will turn out that collisions become fewer in proportion to the number of ships. Hollou°ay's Pills are an excellent Family Medi- cine, and recommended to all sulfeiers with diseases of the Liver and Stoinacli.—'l‘he surprising effect of these wonderful Pills have naturally made them no universal favourite with the Canadians, Ill well as to the inhabitants of all other part! of the world, as they are the best and safest remedy for all disorders ofthe liver and stomach; and to the billions sufferer they are invaluable. It is undisputiibly admitted that these Pills have never been known to fail to can these disorders, when used in accordance with the directions which accompany each box. HASZARITS GAZETTE. b—_NWedi1—esd:y,—Apri1 28th, 1855. We are to have a Census taken this summer, and we look for much information and advan- tage from the results. We had occasion, some few days since, to look into the statistics of the Island, for the purpose of answering certain queries of a gentleman in England, and were enabled to fulfil our task tolcrably well by the aid of the Census taken in former years, and the Custom House and Excise returns in the A n- dix of each of the Journals of the Assembly. We re ret that the Census Bill for the year was liurrie , as it were, through the Legislature, as the Schedules of the last were very imperfect, and might have been amended in this, and there is no excuse for any want of fulness there may be in that ofthe present year, as the Members of the Legislature had the Census of the United Kingdom, and that ofthe United States to uide them. Leavin , however, the increase 0 the o ulation an of the agricultural resources of the Island till after the returns, let us take it short view of the increase of the Revenue, to- ether with that of the imports and exports uring the last 20 years. Amount of goods imported in the ear, ending 5th Jan., 1835, stg. £11I,595 14 6 Exported in the same year. 45,191 16 7§ Ini rted in the year, ending th July, 1845. 97,110 19 6 Exported 11 do 59,158 14 8 m rted in the year, ending oth July, 1855. 273,861 15 8 Exported do do 151,120 18 1 The amount of Revenue for the year, ending 5th Jan., 1835, is £8,641 13 lld currency, or, sterling. 5,761 2 7} For the ear ending 5th Jan., l845.£ 5.056 10s. currenc .or 10,037 13 4 For the ear endin 5th an., 1855, 46,033 4s.%1d, or 30,689 1 0 he population at the commencement of the year 1835, amounted to about (in round numbers), 34,000 In 1845, to about 53, In 1855, is supposed to be about 80,000 This will give upwards of 5s. currency for each individual, in Upwards of 5s. 6d. in And 11s. 6d. in There cannot be a better proof ofthe contem- rnneous increase of the prosperity of the olany than this. That the amount of the Revenue will increase with a greater ratio than that of the po ulntion. is to be expected, became the amount o goods iin ported liable to taxation, increases in a roster ratio, owing to the in. crease of capita , and the increased ability to aflord articles of luxury. Between 1835 and 18-55,the amount of imports have been consider» ably more than doubled, and the amount ofex- rts more than ti-ebled ; to these experts must added the atiiountof the value of ships built and sold in the same years respectively, which In 1834 vessels built 37 : tonnage 43; They showed a vet? l UNITED ‘STATE?’ And in the same year‘. the vessels trans- 4' ‘° ["3 "-l’°‘” iwvooll ; The lVus/N71!-"0" 3""? "‘ 5l’°“’““3°“b° "hi" ferred to other Ports. were 37 3958 Cl“"“v 1"“ "l"'." "C" l tioiis existing lietween SIM“ “id ‘l'° 5°'°"" In 18-14, vessels built, 7 5433 l““k 2 if WV)’ hi“ 1 merit ofthe United SNW“ '*“)"“ , Transferred to other ports, 50 3055 ‘ ~- an they I--W 8”“ t‘‘""- .“°““‘°Y “°‘"‘ In 12:54, mien built. 106 24.111 “ C I civilly to notifv Conclia, that his present course .1-mm,-e,,,,ed’ 65_ 12 343 ‘ml, ,.,.f,,.,,,..,-'9 to Americans an mericaii ’ This will serve to account for the great dig. ere isncy between the im rts and expom, ma ing what is called the balance of trade, appear against us, whereas the contrary mun have been the case, as the country has gone on us we see, increasing its exports year after year. His Excellency,_1_n his speech at the close of the Session, anticipated a falling on‘ in the Revenue of the current year. We confess we are at a loss to ktiow, upon what data th. calculationlis founded. We should say, that if the prices of produce continue to be so rerun. nerative as they at presctit are, and the season is ropitious, the demand for dutiable goods wil increase, and consequently iiugmeng the amount of importations. Vi c ui_ve no fear of its greatly falling short, unless in.the case of failure of cro s, upon which entirely th. rise or fall of tie Revenue depends. That Prince Edward Island has reached a oint of elevation as respects both populatton an wealth, which will command under Providence, a sure and certain, though it may be. s|'“d““l lllcfease in each. is plain to the most careless observer. livery thiti new de ends u on the energy, industry 8115 prudence of her inhabitants. (From the Boston Jlltdical and Surgical Journal.) MR. JAMES HENRY LIASZARD. TH: denili of this estimable young man, late of the medical class Harvard University, under circumstances so peculiarly distressing, had already been made known in our diiily journals, when one of his medical teuclters handed to us ii paper edited by the lmither of the deceased, containing; full account ofthe fearful sutferiiign encountered by the party of whom he was the only one who died, although none escaped without serious injury. .\lr. lIasz.rd was a f.n'ol'lla bolli with liis to-nelieis and his fellow-students; he possessed talents of just the stamp required to make a useful pli_viaiciaii. At the age of 18 years, full of Imp; and eiieigv, lie has been taken away in it must end and painful manner. It would be dillicult lo over-rave the terrible endurance of the crew ofllie fated boat, MIIICII, tvlicii within one lialfiuile of it safe landing, was compelled by the force of storm and surfto put out iigain to son, and “drifletl lielples.-‘|_v in the Gulf (Straits of Nortliuinbcrlimd), lhrougliout Saturday, Salutdiiy night, Sunday night, and Moiiday," 9th and l0l|i March. Mr. Joliiiston, in medical student ar.c.oiiip.-iiiyiiig Ir. Ilnsziird, was badly frost- liilten, us were the others. “"11 bcfievn Ilmt all who knew the snl-j-.ct of this iiolice_ will ncluiowlcilge tlietrutli of an obituary, :1 parlioii of ivliicli we copy from ilie paper nliovc referred to.._ "’I‘lio deceased was a student in the Muliczil College attaclii-d to IIl|I'Vi|l'(I Uiiivcriiity, mid gave indications of peculiar talent and aptitude for the line of study he lind adopted. To these were joined an unremitting industry in the acquisition of knuwletlgs, and sedulous attention to the required exercises, lliat,had his life been spared, would have raised him, in all human ,ir1ibab|lil.y, to great eminence in the profession. Kind, gentle, and affectionate, of irreproiichuble moral cliiiracter, and mild and geiille. man-likein his manners, he had risen high in the esteem of all who knew him. A dutiful son, a kind brother, an attached relative. his uiitiuiely. less is severely felt and deepl deplored by his friends and family. When time, cwever, shall have abated and softened down the poignancy of grief, the re- membrance of his virtues will form the most effectusl source of consolation, and gradually reconcile them to is patient and humble acquiescence in the decrees of an all-wise, though mysterious Providence." For 1lssz1iin's GAZETTE. Mr. Editor ; You were kind enough to give publicity in u lots number of your useful periodical to 11 few remarks of mine on the Land Question, which had previously been refused it place in a professedly liberal paper. As I intimated, I shall now proceed to show, that the country has siren gmuiids to justify the opinions of Mr. Cooper and is adherents in the Assembly. It is certsiu, that the Crown not only held forward the rospect of u just and equitable settlement of the differeiico between Landlord and 'I'e1iiint, but that also Ilcr llliija-st in recotniiieuding and assenling to the civil list Bil , placed in the hands ofthe Colt-nisl Governniciit the power to enquire and right to decide, in the niuuer which was formerly invested in the Crown alone. If the iiiloziiion were otherwise and of that prohibilory nature tepn-setiied by our Liberal Go- vernment, I should like to know llIi\V it is, and for wlnit purposes the easunlund teiriioriiil Revenues. Quit Rents, c., c., ineiiiiom.-d in the V111 and IX clauses, XIV Victoria, Cap. 3, were surrendered to the Colony. It is not surely meant to be said, the compact entered into st that time, is merely binding on the one psrty—thiit is the (.‘ulony—thut the exceptions therein particularly enumerated were used by the Imperial power as a mean subterfuge. s Will- o-the wisp, to mislead the Colonial Legislature and to entrap them into paying the Civil List, and the Pensions of the late (ioverntiient Oflicers, and that when this object had been acquired, it was the inten- tion ofthe Imperial Government, to render the pros- pect there held out of no avail by withholding the iieeessniy measures for nttniiiin sir, no subject of Her Majesty on this Island bilievss such iiileiitions ever were entertained towards III or any other people on the put of the Representative of the British Empire, and yet we are told on the floor ofthe House of Assetnlily, the written instructions conveyed in innumerable despniclics bear this o ' men out. _ The 8th and 9th claim-s of the Statute, to which I just now referred, are clear and comprehensive, from which there is: rigli1'io decide lliiittho Crown not only ceded to the Colonp all its right and interest in the Lands thereof, but u so all arrears, debts,dties, &c.. 0 &c., for our use and belioof; it tliereforti became the the Respon- lirst duty oftheGovernmenl, after puuin " ' site sure and file system into full operation, to 1 active steps to ascertain the full extent of the cessionl spoken n so leyully in the Civil l.ist Bill, in order I0 recover such property f.om the grasp of persons fill’ laid cliiiiii tho-rote; it then became iibsolulely1w¢" sary to establish ii Court of escheiii, in oiderl ' strict justice might be dispensed towards the 0V""' have formerly prevail‘: of llciil I-Istale. Wliiitever seasons min to the necessity of £IIl|I){IIIIIn. 11 Count of this all’ I the introduction of such an institution became " lately necessary and doubl IIIOIII on the advent of the ‘esponsiole sj stem. culiirly when it is taken into contemplation l possibility of ascertaining the extent of Ilie ll?" of the right of the Crown to certain Ian 0 Islsiid; beciiuso ifii Court of I-Iscliesl b-1|! duced into the Colon , tier to the Inn 0 I Crown interest to the Co oniol public. \'5''‘:.,“, might have been resovsred. we I! 3 are as follows : the desired all '