“ 146 A Le, eae Ghe Examiner. LAA TIO TE Tea SS = mee S — ae : than the value of it. In 1842 he offered to nonor of the visit of their Queen's sone Our God, Our | ¢ l Country, and Our Queen,” and with buruing bash depicted | near it, * Ever burning but never consumed.” Now, Sir, | some weeks since my attention was drawn to a flag or apron, [ forget which, hung or suspended over the door of the PARTIZAN RELIGIONLSTS, From our earliest days, the simple teachings of the ** Mo- ther’s Catechizin” have left upen our mind the distinet and irremovable impression, that the leading features of true re- Pg nie to be pure, peace ab'e, gen le, and easy to be entreated, | full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality, and Without hypocrisy ; and, somehew, we ever have the feeling, that, without there, im our private or public profession, no asatrer the cause or Circumstance, the mere parade of a religious ad- herence is obnoxious to the true sens.tive mind, ‘The truly pious de not like to heve wliat they value se highly brought into our streets for idle show, and the silly pleasureing of gaping curiosity. Even the careless in religious matters, and the boe- est, virtuous freeihinker, condemn such a course of procedure, from the fact of Chrievanity being of such a character as can afd does exalt human nature by its teachings and examples. lis purity has an elevating tendency ; but bring rt, arrayed in | nto street contact with all that is valgar , Scotland, with the Istter of these two highly sensivle | t | mottoes thereon inseribed in the Latin tongue; end on the | 12th of July last, on a moderate sized Flag, hoisted over a room in DesBrivay’s building, supposed to be used as an) Orange Lodge, as its inscription, the former—the two first | words, **Qur God,” being omitted. The omission of the, words “ Our God,” I take to be strikingly happy, and to he I. a tacit admission on the part of the Orange Lodge here that | Se “their devil” is the principa! feature omitted in their ald MeDonald: Temperance Hall, in ths City, on the oceasion of a Bagaar yyooting, as set forth in the foregoi 5 being held there, in aid of the funds of the Free Kirk of | Majesty’s Royal Commissioners, no when the lisposal of all the lands in the Island at and before the perio. »f its first settlement. Proposed by Mr. James McDonald, seconded by Mr. poe) on. Edvard Whelan and John Suther- | Resoleed, Thah the epresent the views of this} and, Esquire, be Delegates to r his Island. ere Xo a» shalf the Meeting, 7 Signed, on beb “ W. Wituiass, Chairman. Be TING AT ST. PETER’S BAY. ¢ of the inhabitants of St. Peter's, and ad- | ee MEE A public meetin 'es | th 8 Sather ; ; | must vet worse. ining settlements, was hel. at the house of John Sutl pein | disposed to accord to Mr. Willock god his mom wial the most} Must get wors sqr., Head ot, Polby's Bay, ou Mowtny, we a See | courteous consideration and attention. Findiny, however, as| Examined by C. Palmer, Esquire. fo lowing resolutions, having reference to the Lan iM Mr. Ahercrombee Willock’s Memorial to Her Majesty the Queen, ng resolu'ions, before Her Sth instant. agreed to hear Mr. Willock read his said uw: ww holding theiy Court in |this morning, lopening thereof, eer | taken their seats, he commenced reading it, frequently stopping | ito comment upon the facts set firth in the memorial. to be put in possession of every and all information which | purchase it, t~L£L150 ¢ owed 15 years |} the purchase money with interest at 6 per cent. how LAND COMMISSIONERS’ COURT. Monpay, 10th September, 1869. and dst Mr. Peters asked him £100 sterling for i currency. When asked, if he were al! ) would he be willing to pay for his farm, he said £60 or £7y on the subject of Tenant Grievances Fs dated with interest would be a fair price. The Honourable Cowmissioners having on Saturday, the | Kon. Commissioner Hows.—You mean nothing but the mori! | yalue of the land when you went upon it. ce he accordingly appeared im Court, at the) Mr. Wisy.—It is my labor which has given the land ity to do so; aud, soon alter their Honors had | present value. 1s The | Questioned by S. Thomson, Esquire. ic -+ | My sons have left the Is'and on account of thea onorable Commissioners, influenced, undoubtedly, by a wish | ly ’ e nature of the land-tenure system. I believe that if the were eld in f-e-simple by the occupants, their value wa be doubled in ten years: if they continued to be held @ present the state of the country, instead of getting by yuld, or would, be at all likely to aid them in forming a just timate of the Island agrarian grievances, as arising from} 1e existing system of the land teuures, were evidently well r. Willock proveeded with his memorial, that it contained | decorative wuizarity, uly ‘eviated m as I firmly believe him to be the vere unanimously passed :— eg a reeapitalation of statements contained in the | Lives 9 miles from Town, on Lot 32. Are | ou a6 and vicious, ond we will find it aro = ne, ae ts — Ce ph alley a ae TAP Proposes o a ina McDonald, esconded by Me: | elo a Sa of Aserbly ; and to which their| pions ee eee i. ps but Pal | ® ' me infu over the heart and mind of mankind. | P g° Ceeate wh chee (le 7 = ‘ ; sateen tie altel 6 ait 'freehuiders « he river. here may be ey bi , Toeaparit of Obriotier > is the very opposite to display, pomp, | Improvement, suggest the strict and evident pooper = te Neil Robertson igh a. se iecekile tiniaad mene neh gg ers eee te paulae: he | aware that there are. | Did or did nct the proprietor offer | and bannered demonsirations—ihe quiet retirement of the soul | erasing the last two words, * Our Queen,” ere they nex ' | Whereas, It is the opinion of this Meeting that gh ae L.0 Hon Mr. Coles, M, P. P., they were —in order that | sell your farm to you? He did offer as 0 for £158 is ite chosen place ; and is by operauing there, upon the action | their rag, since they, through the representatives of thei?) wontained in the Land Purel ase Bill were not just 7 se a . might not be’ unseceeerily cooapied, and the ‘Currency. Have any lands or farms on Lot 32. been ° 1, free from all vulgarity and gstentatious eX: | poyored fraternity ian Kengston, have so willfully and’ oat in the purchase Wgaethe Government of the Worrell Es-) their time wa tiie 7 oekine , al ‘ove | lately, that 1s withia the last two or three years? No, ne of the human brain, fr 1 garity hanored fraternity in S ' : ’ PY lacse of the Bill required that! bearinggof other evidence, which, probably, would prove | ; i fee, id] i, hibition, we find it retaining and extending a benign asceac- wickedly insulted her Son. simply take this opportunity, tate, inasmuch . a a o Sead a ables oe ‘lt -° new to them, be needlessly delayed, obliged to within the last ue ste ot a Ane ately oq ’ as sani ~ 66 Boensnesnns?? - . “ ; aT » Dintade » titles « se uM } { ae estiyate reyik ‘ If- {4 o..” ; - 2 . \ sive rope A: > B @ ivot { : “er re euneine Be ae sect pt gon prelim u poe ‘as I wrote above, of warn ng my anti-Orange fellow I sae : oe . bf oa os followin r words : ‘s The Camiiilid ner admon 2s) him, more than once, ol the propri: ty y! dispensing | : Sie cial i ciel alll bent by individuals ‘who hal this or - ces a aban the quiet ctidniininte of de- tant subjests against blindvess to the insidious and cowardly of Public Lande sSatll investigate, or cause to be myestigated, | with all d: gression, and of coming to the | int. : | deme the their farms. One individusl. 1 believe, gave-ag al ies allies as im all things elee, the world’s experience | insults offered to their fellow-subjecis of the Roman Catholic the titles of such lands,and he shall make a report of the re-| Mr. Wiiloc’8 memorial is of great length ; and ot tet te much as £20 for 12 acres, [cannot say whether these Inte § ’ sanaiens — , | persuasion by the Orange Loge of Charlottet hot oe sult of such examination and investi zation to the Government.’’ | set forth many Be tek aealil Lak ar aiane were 12 acres or 24 acres each. You know all about the t wind, its actions speak the mind,” ing the subject matter of Orangeism fit for discussion in a |And the report of the Attorney General s investigation is in ble proceedings a. Prange ses sara P sithough | Winsloe property, do ou not? No, I donot. Were you ee ee ie sblic Journal lthe following words :~-** The conditions of settlements in all | claimants ;—such as the ic'P9OSsing, by the Grantees, ait ~. ever distrained upon ? 4 threa years ago. T had no notieg and we fear much that the truth of this adage is again evi- Pe oo 1 Sir, I write to one who feels with me grate- | the grants, Deing the usual conditions, and being known to | they bad most sigually failed -"% the performance fetal el that the distraint was to be made—heard nothing about it, Scnaee hy he tedam Gapleg of Fgh ond tinsel,” digatsy | nowing Welt, Sir, & write to vastie for his peremptory the Government, 1 hage deemed it unnecessary to adyert to | ditions of their Grants, the saize 1°%s on British subjects as ileard of it when I offered to pay £6; but not before. How and obstinacy,” in the aame of Orange Protestant Coristianity. ful to His Grace the Dake of Newe astie 20 _ os a bet age foregoing mbsizact.”’ Resolved therefor#that they mis have imposed upon Foreirners, had they been long before that hal" m.eola aes? I bed Gale waaill How repuis:ye to every del cate feeling 13 neues . seeing | refusal to countenance the misguided but fatally ante , aan thin suestine, hating Silibs bdaitdence in her Majesty’s Com-| introduced and sottled upon the laads Sv the Grantees, | ae that at thet time, om acconntel thedalians afi soine noisy, headstrong—and very probably _ r os ah fanaticism of the Kingston Orangemen, and most respecttu "y mission, appointed to settle the Land Question, earnestly re- according to the terms of their Grantgg— tie gic®® dec ovens | crops, two or three years back, L was two years in arrear, zan, marching im bray ido-style through some a siret ‘| assuring His Grace that to the long and valued list of pote | quest that the Commission will be pleased to take the pur- dattering and specious representat of tbe a. rl Mr. Debloi ; with the apen Bib'e suspended on his breast! En a. —— | services he has teen the means of rendering to these Colonies, chase of the Worelé Estate, without investigation of the title, possessed by this Island for immigration and settlement, made Mr. Deb eara be of their order, but to put ye = {oo ey ae he a }none are more fully appreciated, or deserve more eatirely | into their honourable consideration, and extend whatever | by the Grantees and their Agents in Britain, which were; Mr Deblois stepped forwardand said, that, if any me The Book of Books,’ and by a ; T. . . ho nas Sa | the sincerest offers of our warmest gratitude than the glori- | benefits may result to the tenantry generally from their de- | practised to induce people to leave their native country ; anu | tion Concerning Mr. Wise’s case were required of him, he wag tring upon - —- — eee ae ee eae ‘ously well-timed aud public attestation he has made in His cision to those who are sottled on the lands purchased by the) who were not made pers of oe pr yawns which had been | repares to o it. The only eee a o (alr, Deblog euevers tasek © ee ae seveanrgg ed J Snide eae oe » of the most disloyal | Government. | practised upon them, until they had arrived in the Island, |}. "ige) “ud the proprietor, so far oa walk up to its instractions— hat is our business oa ' 7 Gracious Mistress’s name ae - th > most disloyal | 08. Reopened tar MAME Mctenis excanded bu dle, Dealt! 5° the picioiiabias of its italniniel being chiefly, if not | — ping? 14 ene of one year's rent,— W ise which we only are accountable, and our consistency of incon | acts ever perpetrated in | oe QPS Y © Seen lo ee ee , ee ~~ | altogether, in the hands of those who had a direct interest in| 0"? *“S © konc4 against him one year earlier than sistency i of consequence chiefly to oyrseives—still, we can- I am, Sir, yours, | Giliie : ' : : i -. | deluding them, the were deprived of the means of redress. or | that rent wae TO ent. to have commenced. Ho not but reverence that [ible from which we lisped our earliest A PROTESTANT CITIZEN. Resolved, That in the event of Her Majesty’s Commission Sd elleuadiien aenthal ah situation ; and their mene tn by ble ageearents ite Wrong om that head, he (Mr. Jeagons and acquired our earliest ideas of knowleige ; we way | Charlottetown. Sept. 15. 1860 /not interfering with the titles of Land, this mecting would footie oe eee z sb ae ee oe ae) believing Mr. Wise to be ul ake .™ pay. As to wisat Mg, have indeed neglected it and ali its teaghings, but the heart ™ DWO, Sept. Lo, . ‘consider it a boon conferred upon them did the ¢ omErission | . hr cooks pa eee Beso had ay ctecnanad | Deblois) had determined to MaKe is previous notice of the even vet, and amidst al) its wanderings, bea s tenderly towards P. S.—Allow me space, by the bye, to congratulate my reduce the price of land on the W orell Estate, which is ten | bat rl coke i Miesrms of a Kas cl Daten | W ise had said about his ea os as he made u its loving kindness, andi thrills with sorrow to see it dedased anti-Orange fellow-Protestants on the possible dawning of a Shillings currency per acre, to a par with that of the Selkirk | saenitein. ti Gi tutes makes oom ie he tour At distraint which he (Mr. D) ba ene tice of it - * least be by the public, vulgar use of its sacred presence to grace @| | ow ora in store for them, myself and our Island home, sar- | Estate, which this meeting ‘Understands to be three shillings | a a aan ge ia Wont of tans ee f fe a , wd eae him, he had, he believed two mon : ome sof ka offee blic partisan procession, And to us of Scottish blood, Alled » that as the insultiag and too long tolerated self-arro- | 8d six pence per sere. h er desti 10 a pee. 5 %n } Of Leases of fore bo “ | was certain that such notice was sent out o : pu p tt ike of Gubhehdew ead foccde |e * vat as the insulting an ° 5 7 Sd sa. P h h Mec iy eedeniiaih M |lands, in many cases for the short period of forty years, at) Mr. Pawer to Mr. Wise. If you were about to sell your aan ad cl thas cieaabats proclamation of the Word | gaace of | Orangeism = hitherto ten a - Pa a by Mr. Anthony McCormack, seconded by Mr. | ee end. of which the said poet a > delivered up, van ‘farm, what would you ask for it? Wise, f once asked aman , seains an unhallowed freedom, for, with our pret Nicol, we can the true I rotestantism anc loyalty on en ri pt We | . Resolved, That thie meeting. heing SWale that three per- | al a anger gee oF at . onthe Ol one ee if he would give me £100 for it, and he said he would noi, r aij within our secret hearts excialin ; | Perceive in the page 4 a i = bigs oe sons, viz: Charles Worell, ‘Colonel Surrell, and Captain | "Neagle eri Ba eestor teak pe "pall was Evidence of the Delegates of the Tenantry on Lot 34—Messrs. ’ Thom doubly-precious book ! | Orange flag nr ae their ep : _ ~ - ea Stewart, were demanding and endeavouring to collect rents haiied by aise Tilintheeentil a lee harbinger of justice ; that | James Robertson, John Scott McLeod, Isaac Thompson, . Unto thy light w at doth = Seotiand owe 7 | Cottaere ou the log ot ALIUgS, @0 ‘s leir ce we ae Ci for the same land, at one and the same time, have ther8fore | an official return was transmitted to ler Majesty's Wintesess| Doug/as, and another. ne eee — | malcontents . Ap Pose ape het a : . 3 0c | reason to doubt the existence of auy valid title. by the Liout. Governor, setting forth the number of acres in Tne information affeede’ tthe Recents by Gis Ia lowly home: = comforter art thou— | personation of their temporal Sovereign, that they may, with | 4th. Proposed by John McIntyre, Esqr., seconded by Mr. the Island settled and unsettled at the period alluded to, and | delegates and the opinions avowed by them, may be summed ; A sunbeam seni from God—an everlasting bow !” others like them, colleetively, ere long, effacing the two last | Donald Melntyre ; (exhibiting a list of a number of Townships clearly liable to | up as follows : i And, in eddition, may we rem-rk, that if the truths and | remainivg words “ Our Country,” from their detes able Flag, Resolved, Liat this meeting do appoint John Satherland, forfeiture for a breach of the covenant relating to settlement,/ “Wpen their grand-fathors or their fathers settled upon the < teachings of the book hid been carried as carefuliy witiin | leave this Colony and Upper Canada ior their respective Esaqr., M. -r., to tepres vat the views of the people of the even on the supposition that the indulgence dispensing with lands now in their occupation, these lands, being covered with < ihe breasts of these Pro'estant partisans in Canada the other | countries’ g od, and this [sland and that splendid province \V orrel] Estate to the Commission at Georgetown, on the 19th the conditions requiring the lands to be settled with Foreiga i taick woods, were valueless as respected all imm-diate ol . week, a8 it iteelf was gatly amt gallantly displayed on the) i, ihe peaceful oceupation of more deceut Christians and inst., and that he be respectfully requested to lay the fore- Protestants had been then issued and sactioned by the law; | of cultivation ; they had first to eut down heavy birch woods, outside, we would certainly have observed Jess unseeni!y | oyal subjecta, going resolutions before the Commission. | that the lands were on the point of being revested in the row), | which, when cut down, were not worth one farthing to them. e 4 conduct. aad less of that mulish obstinacy, that, -_ or | °F cian be 80 —— —— by ~ ee ee | People a nee ae paying at the eo * “Se V j db ywever direct its course wa e to a. of them disposed of their grants fo ame i ° | per acre tor their farms, and quai @ ignorant © ewi ernese 2 et ing, and disturbance. : To tHe Epiror or tae Exasiven. A PUBLIC MEETING | instances (or less than one penny per acre! to land-jobbers, ashe of this Island, honght, when they were informed that tl ° We have sot the remo(est desire to fiad fault with Orange- | Mea. Eperog,—Permit me to make a few remarks in reference | Was held at Willing Lerkin’s, Bay Fortune Road, Lot 56, specare ame, and ausi-constitutionaliste ; _ at the anne they might have it at lg. an were, that, could they obtain farms w men przing their belief, having their lodges, and spreading | to a raimvur which has been iv circulation this same tune, to | on Wednesday, the 19% Mstant, at 2 o'clock, p.m , at whieh the time, the tenaats settled “7 them were sulject to eer | here at that rate, it would he quite easy jor them to attain to h “their order before the world. But we do insist that ail this the effect that favour is shown by those clerical gentlemen of following resolutions were gnaninously agreed to:— [pee ee rom one Fo sini? shillings sterling per ae ae almost imuediate independence: but, when they came out, ny should be done in good taste ; and, as it presumes to be a re- | various denominations of Protestants who compose our Board | Pecibedent ‘tin tic, Cathkin: coctiadih tee the. Unde) 25,000 acres it is stated. nto cams was purchased DY they soon found that to clear a single acre for cultivation as lngious order, everything in its Connexion shuuld be pervaded | of Education, to those Teachers belonging to their different | hit a 7 at. Wee ES the late Governor Fanning enact f Mr. Willock’ sal | would cost them no less then, £4 ~ 6. Tarte ea li with the spirit of that ic claims to represent. Now, in this in- | sects, who have undergone re-eXaminalian receutly uader the | ys a y whee alle me Leite Laces } [The reporter did not tase — s r. Vwi - 8 sae ; been in a course of ca tivation and improvement for about w stance of the Prince's visit, all of this was violated, and violated | provisions of the new Act, passed during the last Session of re _ 7 - R i oe i ie titer . ae as he (Mr. W.) read it, for the peree of eee years may be worth 20 years’ purchase. So said Mr. Robert in ia the grossest manner. On such an occasion as tins first the Leyisiature ; and that the Catholic Teachers, having no | '°? D ee = the ee de seiiitali ad ei a b i hihia ; like a full report oi it ; and neither would the shuffling of nag | BOB ; but Mr Thomson said they were not worth more than public visit of the heir of Hagiand’s throne to his mother’s very | person en the Board to show them fair play in tieir contest | . aagaeti are | ween os a ene wee cuts | and restlessness of individuals in the Court hare eee 7s. or 7s Gd. per acre—not a ne more—allowing the re etxensive North American possessions, to which he came, not | with sectarianism, are overpower d by the injustice of ther|— duires with theca a ot — oo 3 real hi = do so, had ty been his es wee po re qgongirn landlord's tivte to be perfectly good. If the whole of the th as the representative of any church hierarchy, but ag the repre-| opponent=, and compelled t» quit the field, under the impression ae "ey Can De ODIMAG ee eaers in other pari@al the | Me. W ilock with ie eee re i aa ie | Montgomeries’ property were to be sold to the tenants, 78 aa sentative of that civil! Government that grants liberty of con-) that the success of the battle of Board does not depend so much | #8!884- ee comptes a : | contd possess mane the a ates ae eer eich | acre would, in his opinion, be quite enough for it. , science to all, certainly it waa outrageously out of place for upon the individual strength or skill, as upon the wumber and fePeoposed by Mr. Janam Whelan, seconded by Mr. Michee! the foregoing he be SunenEP te partes poten a ane Hon Mz. Couss said it should be andersiood by the Court f the votaries of one religious denomination to appear publicly ! inftuence of the friends of the contending parties, |Wahisy: sae 3 faithful epitome of its contents and just representation o | that Lot 32, the lot in question, was the best in the Island ~ with insignia and dreas vbnexious to agother religious demomi-| With regard to this ramour, I am compelled to say, that [| Resolved, That it is Nae of the people on this Township | their nature. } . | Hon. Commissioner Hows asked—If there were ares nation, which made no simijareziibdition, Religious differences! can scarcely give it credence. I: may possibly be the exse,|to Rave an enqury mad nto the original grant of the Town- Act of the Colonial Legislature, of 1803, for effectually | PPospect than that the lands would for ever remain subject to R, ef opinion had nothing earthly ta do im welcoming the Prince | that justice 1s so far sacrificed to party prejudice and sectarian- | ship, in ordor ro test tne Vaiially at the title thereto ; and that | * revesting in Hes Maiicte. His Eire ead ‘Successors, ali their present rents, would it cause many of the young men on a ua to pn and had the [rish Catholics been equally foolish ism, as to render the above allegation true; but f entertain | should the present noldgs ge confirmed Ss possession, it is ci Canttie' ae ats a chan Os Mable to forfeiture snithin thie the lot te leave the Island? Mr. Thomson. He believed it Ne with the Irish Protestants, the results might have been of a | very graye doubts respecting it, for this reason: that the just |the earnest desire of the Bétilera oa Lot 56 hat all the o'd ar- Siteah 4 site |would. Mr. McLeod. Young men had no chance to stay ‘all very serious nature. A: iias too frequently harpened else- | ness and amiableness almost invariably Characteristic in indivi- rears of rent should be hyyiven, and that they should be en- | or or a ce : eo : se | bere. _ He had nine sons, some ol them grown up. He could as where, figh' ing and murdering would have been the inevitalgbe | duals of the clerical calling orght to be blended with every abled to purchase ther farms at or ab ui such rate &+ that at 7 . i. I ore, Eeqcire, the —e il _ pel - (Eso age not take (arms for them ; but if land were ata fair price, he ee consequences, and al! in the empty name of a religious profes- | action of those gentlemen tn their present vocation, who, ip | which the Seikirk estate has been sold to the Government. a an apenas mn, a8 i “— him by the 4 cag oe oo would try to buy lands for them. If he could not they would om sivn. Public profession, indzed, but blessed with neither pub- consideration of these virtues, ougiit not to be warped in their | Signed, on behaif of the meeting, Eaaneeny Saat, to tags oe - m snusefipt jours oy — ae go off to foreign countries. We have never had bad =“ Poh hie nor private practice. let the members of Orange societies judgment by the above motives. [ can hardly be induged wt Ricuaro Dway, Chairman. having reference to the said Act, pro saced, ond laid ners but many have had bad ones, by whom they had been pres ‘ . maintain their organizations if they choose, and especially if| believe that those who cali themselves ministers of God, whose | the Honorab! ; een & am aecesps parp : ting 0 be | alm sttodeuth. Vrom such agents the proprietors got litde; 9 PO they are of any ben fit in cases of sickness, or distress, or | lives should be exemplary—whose characters should serve as EB se )a copy of the _ I Act, ind to be eadorsec as Such by the late | bat they (the agents) lived and fattened as long as they could | death, but let them be maintained with security to the public | modela fer their respective flocks to mould theirs by—whose | For mie Examiner. | John Cambridge, Esquire, a hel eee , _ | Apon their agencies, and, when they couid retain their posts § 9 peace, snd on that understanding only. if dangerous, jet them judgment and actions should be characterized by justice and THE LAND COMMISSION. | In ee ty a question pose ey ~ u 7 Mredhensiay. ] no longer, aWay they went! 1 hold 100 acres at a rent of tho: be put down, by law if necessary ; but we would far rather see | the strictest impartiality, would act so. | repeat, | can scarcely | : 4 : eb ae 'Mr. Pope said he bad procured it from the office of the! ¢5 1s, Id. per annum. Stumping has cost me £3 an acre. by ul them wise and prudent enough themselves to refgain in fu'ure | believe the report to be genuine which states that those gentie- | An unusually large an respecta e emg 9 ‘ . Tuhabi- representatives of the late Mr. Cambridge. My farza is worth £300 or £400. I think the lease worth Gas : from al! such disturbing and useless exhibitions ; and they may men, Wearing their white neckcloths as emblems of purity, tants of the Kastera portion of L t o0—k anbipg s istate Ce rlifie d Copies of Grants } nothing. W bat 1 have done upon the land is worth £300. I & \ cepend upon it that such a course of action would redound te} would soil their ermine in exercising such unjustifisb'e partiality |—was held inthe Vernun River Schoo!-house, on Friday, | Hon. Mr. Hzwsizy laid befure the Court certified copies of | Would be willing to buy the foe-siu p e of my farm a from ara their credit, and give them a Sigher stauding then they now | in the passing of Teachers, as is reported tu be employed by | the 14th inst., for the purpose of taking into consideration the cnleteal aeinte shia) add. gihe learned gentleman 7% Qs. por aere ; butt am weil aware thai all the land in ‘ Sees te tee Semation af Seen Wis Siew pelbtenlly, of re- | the. he | What means ought to be adopted in order that this Kstate said the conditions of those grants were such as were act forth | UAder cultivation in vol a ae a utenti ee a bt ligiously, or otherwise, they now differ. It is saddening to re- | Bly residence being near the northern extremity of the) might be fairly represente! beiore the Royal Commission, generally in ail the grants. [ O70 BOAF Che MATRCh, GEE WANS WE Wels De Welln ee C ; flect upon the frequent ev'ls that have attended these Orange | [siand, a considerable distance, as you are aware, Sic, from its rh. ssa > Ials Maloolm Forbes, Esq., having been | Leases. | the highest figure. : end d in G , 2 | dite) t lis oc : ax Teache ‘ epair | Sitting in the Island. Maloolm Forbes, 4sq-, having been } kion. Commissioner Gray asked Mr. Robertson what he ” t esmonstrations here and in Great Britain. We have with our | iitte metropoius, the locality where our Teachers must repair | ‘hair, and Mr. J. Bi. Fletei ee . ia Grey said it was desirable that a copy of a! : ” ss : on own eyes witnessed scenes of the mest brutish character created | 19 undergo examination, it is natural to suppose that the doings | Called to the Chair, and Mr, oe REE appotuted Se-| Ion. ¢ a saree gi eine i ; * 7 at i * thought would Le a fair purchase of the jands held under in the aime of this ordés > 0 Scotland, Engiand, and once | of the Board might be sadly miastated before re aching the ears ,cretary, the { ilowtag resolutions Were DaAaeany aaopteu: lease, such as — eases genera y run, 820 1id be laid Delore | lease, whateyer the rents might b —whether 6d., 9d., or 1.5 Vie here in these United Staies, Orangemen in processious, with | of people of this unzemal el.me, and consequently be misre-| 1. Proposed by Juka MeDougald, Esq., secouded by Mr. the yey age — engaged that this should be done per acre per annua. Myr Robertson replied—10 years con the desecrated emblems of religion on their breasts, and mad-| presented to us, While | most ardently hope that such is the | Samue! Sabine— Hon. Mr. Hensusy ¢ Ne"e° — as SU0Us one. purchase, it the Proprietors’ titles be good. - . dened by drink and ignorant fanaticism, cudgelling suspected | case, { must say. in conclusion, that if it be really a fact that | Resotvep, That this meeting heartily concurs iz the opinion | Case of Joseph Wise, Lot 32. Fishery Reserves. , Catholics, and shooting them, like dogs, im cold blood, we there is any favour siown to one party more than to another ‘expressed: by certain resolutious passed at a meeting of! Hon. Mr. Hevstey read to the Court a memorial of Joseph! Jt appeared to be the opinion of these delegates, with respect z have ourselves seen ; stood by while cold blooded murder was | these gentlemen are unworthy of their high calling, and forfert ‘the inhabitants of Princetown Royaity and Lut 18, beld on! Wise, of Lot 22. In this memorial, it is stated that the to the Fishes y Reserves, that it would be best for the tenants By . 4 ee ed eed te ae cee eee oat ponoar anquesionably due to unpartial and). o7ti uit., for tho -purpége of taking into consideration | memoralist came to this Island in 1830; that he took a lease whose lands abué on these Reserves, that the Reserves should My4, S escape the punishment they (pate ag? we ae sie td oe | Justice-loving gentlemen. ' |matters counected with the Land Question, and the Land of 100 acres of land from the late Mr. Owen, the agent of the | be included in their farms; and that, when any portions of “By, ; and surrounded by their armed associates, the onlookers dared | I remain, yours tru'y, Soe os es ’ late Mr. Cambridge—term 999 years, rent to commence in| thom shodld he techieed Sie Gite urposes, they should bet i } while the police, of the A NORWEGIAN. | Commission appointed thereon. a ; es ee ee Se 26m BON ae 2 img pary » they Gord not interfere, or they too would die, while the police, of the) . " | eo ee ’ ; “ 1833, at od. per acre, for the first year, Gd for the second | at liberty to let such portions to parties $0 requiring them, am seme creec chiefly, and sy npathisers with the ruffians, were | North Cape, Kildare, Aug. 16, 1860. | 2 £§ roposed by J. H. Fletcher, seconded by Mr. Allaw year, 9d. for the third year, and 1s. for the fourth year,| whatever terms they could mutually agree upon. To the ; conveniently on duty where their services were not wanted. | weal | MeDougald — 3 |and for each succeeding year until the end of the term; that question, put by the Hon. Mr. Coles, Would they be wilti : 1 ' Only the other day, in the imp ee : ave N. m2 an | Ws bik Malic tn tele Beacticcnd Resotyep, That this meeting learns with much satisfae- | when he took the land he believed it to be Mr. Cambridge's ; | ,, pay Soe thee Fishery Reserves what they paid for the rest ‘ i T:ish Orange Protestant procession from New York visited tne eee tion that the Land Commission now sitting in this Island, | but that, in 1835, when, with a view to some new arrange-| their farms? Mr. McLeod said. No.’ , place, and marched through tye streets, every man bearing his Sin,—Are you aware that in appointing Small Debt | 59 fay as it has progressed in the several msiatens referred to | ment about his farm, he applied for terms to Messrs. Crake —— Cc F ea 1D h Tr, hip 65 by peveiver, " avenee thet ci yt satd s9 sentein many of their | Commissioners for the Court at St. Peter’s, the Government | i¢ for its decision, ives every reasonable ground for hoping | ##4——— who bad a mortgage on Mr. Cambridge's lands, they ase of Neil Darrach, of Township 65. Th 4 count;ymen who are Catholics, and a8 they paraded along with | “a a han a daanaie from (Queen’s County for that purpose ? dunk weeed , od 7 il *. ‘it le Si he Te piss (informed him that his farm being on that part of the Lot) Tuopniucs Stewart, Esquire, appesred to call the parti- : their display of mottoes, pamtings and emblems, offensive to | ave . P neo ‘ gti playa SATAN rat g Y good will accrue from its labors to the Tenantry | which had been assigned to Loyalists, they had nothing to do | cular attention of the Hon. Commissioners to this case, which ites those of an opposite creed, te Mayor had to call out the loca! Such is, indeed, t ae ee oe ee b “| of this sland. ‘ | with it; he them discontinued payment of rent, but that when | the Hon. Mr. Coles had brought under their notice the day , military, anticipating every moment an attack on sowe chapel | particularly as the ae ee 10 oon 9 ry + & Proposed by Mr. Andrew O’Keiff, seconded by Mr.\ Mr. now Judge Peters became agent for Mr. now Sir Samuel | before. and or residence known to belung to those of the Romist fauh | competent person in the world. It seems that the few sup- Charles Richards \ supndsin Dist caidiatan oni ile tee wualanendine After dreaming cote inant the ecietaklla , . Nothing, however, occurred tll the last, when a poor negress| porters of the Government in this quarter are so ashamed of | Resouved, That in view of the foregoing resolutions, this | means to contend at law, was obliged to submit to the demand | relation te the gant systeta of the land tenures as would gt ee) lost her life, as the members of the lodges fired off their pistols their party for their general mismanagement of affairs, that | meeting deem it highly necessary and expedient to send three made upon him for arrears of rent by Mr. Peters; and that, warrant their a owing any time of the Court to be consumed un¢ when leaving the city, and such was the unfortunate conclusion | 144 one of them could be induced to take th@ofice. At all | delesdtes to Charlottetown, to oo-operate with the other dele- | therefore, he was obliged to give Mr. Peters his Bond and | in hearing it, the Hon. Commissioners courteously consented f hol ; of ee a ara im the peers na te ae ‘events, none of them will venture to say @ word publicly in | ents gent frome the ie sections of the Island, in bring-| Warrant for ey ~~ _ since ay: i ai to oo we, pb — - = Mr a then Certainly, therefore, it was wisdom on the part of the Prince, | © 4} ing Governme i eed y i . ’ + oat ee ee es present time, he has paid in all, on account of rent, 3.;| Went throu e case with much clearness and succinet to an aan Suiabiite sebuke these partisans in Canade, as be hse} pee om eens Oca and its speedy downfall ing before the Commission the several grievances arising out at hebas never on disposed to resist a just demgnd for | particularity. Whereupon the Hon. Court at once decided ff go, i done. Their display was ou! of place ; suggested by the pride | is confidently predicted o + ae tfull of the Laud tenures po this Island, : ‘rent; that he is still willing to pay what he covenanted to |'#at to deal with it did not come within the scope of their the i of creed, it was likely to iesd te ill fee ing among their fellow Yours respectfully, Messrs. Malcolm Forbes, John MeMillan and Samuel | pay; but wishes to know whether—as his farm is loyalist | Commission. Z j inhabitants; i was distourteons to their visitor, who came MAC. Sabine were then choven as Delegates to act in Accordance | land—he ought to pay to the proprietor of the Township. or| The whole case is contained in the Report of a Special so ihere not a* a partisan, bu: a3 a Privce, and who though 4 St. Peter’s, Sept. 14, 1860. with these resolutions. “The meciing was then addressed by | to the Government ; and thinks that, if Mr. Cambridge had no Committee of the House of Assembly, 9th April, 1853. tb. j Protestant, will in the course vee . ree a . - — ee a several infiuential gentiemen, wheu it was resolved that the right o lease the eee ~ Wise, ought to be paid To be continued. 4 the 4 obalnixy, to mete out the less! Inwe Of Ssreat Beitasa ts ‘ ies Ladianiiad . xa miner | back all the money which he bas paid as rent under his lease. i ; Cathie end Protestent, vith the seme equal hand. Goo! Duhlio Meetings on the Land Question. eee = on Mthe Islander and Examiner |"*0' 8 ate Hareuny acid aot oueal os eee eee * - * tagie and common seuse should have taugh: them that loyalty 3 newspapers lor publication, memorialist ; and the question was whether it came within the Tt h & . J h. ia the property of no one creed, while, on the other hand, a : E ; : a ae By order, iii - scope of the Commission. Others similarly cireumstaneed ? ; YaAniNne ci Do: «if creed does not necessurily mane Ws believer loyal. Bur, hd MEETING AT GRAND Riy ER, LOT 56. Sept. li, 1869. J. [i. FLET CHER, Secretary. were waiting to know the opinion of the Court on Mr. Wise’s - state of iN a wh, a spite of ol! creed interference, Canada hae ouly shown that the A public meeting of the inhabitants of Gr.nd River, Lot i. es = it of . ti heart fromecentre to true spirit of untrammelled oyelry filis ber ' circumnference.—Scottish American, New York, Sept. 15. Ea Correspondence, eed To raew-Eprrox or tHe Exawinen. Six ;—The outrages on our common loyalty and love of law avd order commenced and perpetuated by the Orange Lodges in and about the Uiry ot Kingston, U. W., during the hours that His Roya! highness the Priuce of Wales’ Steamer lay off that port, are simply so characteristically disloyal and utterly unchristian, that I had fain uot sally your pages by any referenc> to their occurrence but by way of drawing the attention of my fellow liberal minded Pro- testants in this Colony to the loathsome insults offered to their fellow-christiana of the Roman Catholic Church by the Orangemen of thia Island, or at least by the Charlottetown a read in the Monitor of this week that the Montreal Witness announces the faci that the Societies of 3t. George and St. Andrew are bona fide narionaL, whereas, that of St. Patrick, confining its admigsion list solely to professing members of the Chureh of }}ome, cannot right! y be character- ised as National. We never before heard that the Society of St. Patrick refuse admission to any native of [reland on the score of his religious cresd, any more than that the sister national Svcietics of St. George aud St. Audrew refuse ad- mission to any members of the Church of Kome who are respectively natives of Hngland aud Scotland. The three natioual Societies above meotioned are equally simply organ- 56, was held at the Cross Roads School House, on Wednesday Evening last, 19th instant,—W. Henry Williams, Esqr., in the Chair—for the purpose of making known to tle Royal oe gps a ¥ ; it : ‘ Land Question, in thatsection. ‘he meeting was nume attendd, there being present a very large majority of the |, Tenants on the Township, and the ful owing Resolutions were unanimously agreed to :— Proposed by John E. McDonald, Esqr., seconded by Mr. | James McKenzie : Whereas, this Meeting having been informed that Her Ma- jesty's R.yal Commissioners are invested with full powers to | settle the various questions at issue between landlord and |! ditions in the original grants —the arrears of Quit Rents due from the Proprietors to the Government—or the unjust oc- capation by the latter of the lands known as Fishery Re- serves ;~ Resolved, That the people here assembled confidently hope that those questions will be settled to the satisfaction of the inhabitants of the Island generally—that the titles to Township lands will be inyestigated—that if the arrears of Quit Rents are legaily due the payment of them shal! be en- forced—and that the interests of Her Majesty's subjects in the Fishery Reserves shall be secured to them, and that they shall no longer be compelled to pay rent for the same. Proposed by J. C. Underhay, Esqr., seconded by Mr. Charles McDonald: Resolved, That in the event of Her Majesty's Commissioners confirming proprietary tiles under the criginal grants, this Meeting ardently hopes that a remis-ion of all the old arrears of rent, whether secured by bonds notes or bills of sale—may awarded by the Commissioners ; and that in determining a scale of prices for the purchase of Tuwnehip lands, the terms on which a purchase should be effected on behalf of the Ten- antry should be as favourable as those that are likely to be a ised for charitable » and ignore the revognitivn of any | seeared to the settlers on the Selkirk estate. And it is also creed or class in the rollsof wembership or objects of charity. | the opinion of this Meeting re such purchase of Township lands should be made throug! the agency and on the eredit of the Government of this Isiand -strengthened by the active cvoperation of Ller Majesty's Imperial Government, which In the other Colovial payers we read that the Orangemen of that indelibly disgraced ( ity of Kingston included athong others of their most hateful and stupidiy bigotied printed ltl, BR Ste tinea, Commissioners the views entertained by the Tenantry on the Cross Roads Se motion, Rev. Dr. Knox was chosen Chairman, aud Mr. John Burler, Secretary. Aftor the meeting had becu ably addresse@ by the Rev. Doctor and other geetiemen, the following Re- sulutions were unanimously passed. tenant, whether relating to the non performance of the con- | Question of this Island. meeting that tue prosperity aod improvement of the Island syste; aud that there can be neituer prosperity nor cou- /tentment in the Cvlony until the tenantry shall yvecome freeholders. Stewart be appointed Delegates to meet the Commissioners, and communicate such information ou bebulf of the Tenants as they may require. published iu the Examztner and Islander newspapers. high and unvarying testimonials of approval as the Oxygen- step Birzers prepared by Sera W. Fovie & Co., Boston, and advertised in this paper in favor of this remedy are among the first in standing and respectability throughout the British Provinces and the United States, and ought to have weigfgt with those who are afflicted with Dyspepsia or “7 of its agendant evils, such ag Ladiges- PUBLIC MEETING AT LOT 438. A meeting of the inhabitants of Lot 48 took place at the hoolhouse, on Friday, September 21st, for the laims and grievances of the Penantry of said Township. On * | ar let. Resolved, That this meeting has full confidence in the ° : ‘ er fonorable Commissioners appointed to xettle tae Land th th Zod. Resolved, That it is the firm conviction of this re very much retarded in consequence of the leasehold 3rd, Resolved, That the Rev. Mr. Knox and Mr. Robert la 4th. Resolved, That the proceedings of this meeting be Joun Knox, Chairman. Joun Burves, Secretary, | ¥ Probably no medicine of modern times has received such The names appended to certificates ; a & *¢ this Meeting considers should be freely given, in satisfaction | tion, Sour Stomach, Loss of petite, Ucadache, and Liver ebibboleths, the tollowiug iuseriptious on arches erected iv tur the injary indicted om the Colony by the indiscriminate | Complaint. la failure of his crops, he was two years in arrear of rent, Mr. Deblois, Sir Samuel Cunard’s present agent, had issued a warrant of distraint egainss him; and that the seizure made rously | purpose of bringing before the Honorable Commissioners the | 824°? it had injured him very much. until he was told of it by Mr. Deblois’s day when he called at his office to pa a bailiff had gone to distrain for his at to pay rent to the owners. not sell because he could not; because Mr. Cambridge it, loyalist assignment of tl another pay or have portion of the Townsh portion sit rent tree. prietor. dual cases brought before the general working of th deersion to afford ev farm ata fsir price by an Order in Council. — cases—we cin giveshged to none but such as ill general system... evils—the disadvantages—of expressly dea’ with t. If fraudulent moans, to take redress must be sought in the ord M. Wise said that about three years ago, when, owing toa LATE AND IMPORTANT NEWS. The Cunard Steamship Melita arrived at Halifax on the evening of the 13th instant, in ten days from Liverpool, with — dates to the Sth instant. The news of most importance by _ this arrival relate to the affairs of Italy ; and if the accounlé of Garibaldi’s progress are to be depended upon, there ise™ likelihood that the Neapolitan Kingdom will soon pass out of the hands of the Bourbons. The following extracts give the principal features of the news : — The correspondent of the Daily News, at Turin, who has access to official quarters, announces the military arran " made by Count Cayour’s Cabinet, in anticipation of the im- mediate fall of the Bourbon dynasty. The object is to pre vent Naples becoming a prey to anarchy. The Neap lita army is either conquered or broken up. The people are pr claiming Vietor Kmmanuel. Delay might cause the ight wreck of the monarchial principle, or a French Prince might tarn the interregnum to his own profit. T it Rowever, be no delay, ‘The Piedmontese berseglieri are to land at Naples forth With from the Sardinian ships. Gen. La Marmora is to at rive a speedily as possible afterwards with 30,000 men. the rapid conveyance of so large a force should be im possi Die, the Pope will be asked to allow a passage through his domi- nions. The Pope has twice before conceded this passage—Oonee to the Austr.ans, and once to the Neapolitans, The Sardinia Government is hiring every transport it can find, and the. Pope’s assent miy dot be required: but time is recious. The question is, what Lamoriciere will do in case a Piedmon- tese lorce passes through the Pope's territory. Other ques> tions besides the Neapolitan may be hastening a sation The Sardinians say that Austria will not be toucved, bat sho must cease making Ancona her military fort. Francis H. is ready and anxious to be off to Gaeta, as the | He was not aware of e step which had been taken against him by Mr. Deblois eiR, one market- 1} account of his not receive, as He was willing rears. This sum theclerk told him On being further questioned by the Honourable Commission- sand the learned Counsel, he said he wae not a loyalist or e son of a loyalist. His sons bad Jeft the Island because ey had no prospect of scsi here by farming. [Ile did +his lease was not a good one, who granted it had no right to grant purposed to demise was a part of the 1¢@ Township. None but himself and paid rent for any part of the loyalist ipy All others settled on the loyalist a as the land which it Hon. Commission : cx Gray.—If the loyalists did not take the n , itseemed only right that it should revert to the pro- We do not wish'to have particujar or mere ind ivi- us. We wish to ascertain what is e land-tenure system; and by our ery tcnamtan opportunity to purchase his hecime sed MUA We On the question's being asked—Tiow tie t Loyalist Lands ere laid off ? the Hon y + Ugles replied, They were laid off '0n. ( OMMISSIONEE 4OWE.— We cannot deal with particular ustrate the fon. Commissi0yge Gray.—This ease no doubt shews the the system; but we cannot an individual bas been induced, by a Jease which it is held ig not valid, inary Courts of Law. Mr. Wise examined by the Hon. Mr. Hensley. Mr. Wise, in answer to the question, what would you think fair price for your farm? said he bad already paid more Charlottetown, P.E.L,, September 25, 1860. last stage on Neapolitan soil on his routs to Vienna or Madrid. | The last despatches from Naples come down to Monday last, at which dute ** there was nothing new.”? The