gt PT te James Cullen. . Sach being the case, Mr. Cooper's mother, the widow of the deceased Mr. Cullen, would have been enti- tled to a /ife interest, to the extent of one third of all the pro- perty of which her husband died possessed. That is, as we apprehend it, the true positiou of the case up to the time of | the interference of J.B. Cooper. This worthy, having left his family and country for reasons best known to himself—(of | which plethora of the purse was not one)—in such hot haste | that his time bat admitted of,his taking the pay without per- | forming the duties of Assistant Clerk of the House of Assem-_ bly ; and having found that the land of his adoption was not capable of appreciating his high deserts—signalizes his re- turn from his unsuccessful tour by stigmatizing those who, pursuing the even tenor of their way in the Island, had main- tained their character and increased their worldly condition by | minding their own business, and letting the J. B. Coopers | mind theirs. The fox who had lost his tai] endeayoured in| vain to persuade his fellows to denude themselves of their | caudal appendages; and J. B. C., having reaped the reward | of his own conduct, would fain bring down to his own dimi- quantity, without any reservations on aecount of deficiencies | from which timber can be easily and rather cheaply obtained | THE what does he mean by ** cash with no reservations?” We will} tell our readers. Ile means that the Government are to pay him the full price per acre, according to his statement of the | in the quantity of land, of any partial or total payments of | purchase monies for any portions of the estate, or of arrears of rent, or for stumpage, &c. In fact the modest Mr. Douse means that the Government are to pay him just what he} chooses to ask, without reference to the condition of the pro- | perty, or in vulgar parlance, ** to buy a pig in a poke.”’ { The truth is, that Mr. Douse is unwilling to part with pro- | /perty which has been the nursing mother of his fortunes, and of which he is direetly interested in retaining the control, and | keeping the accounts from the investigation of others, and | } | } for building fleets. To enable him to do this, he found it expedient to assert in the public press that the Government! were unable to purchase the property. Why did he not ace | company the unwarranted statement with the publication of the official letter he received jong since from the Government, | inviting him to enter into negotiations for the transfer, to | EXAMINER. ns : / F'ruit.—Best Grapes, Hon. Charles Young ; Summer Pears, Mr. Douse ; Winter Pears, Mrs. J. Bryenton ; Autumn Eating Apples, Mr. Dark; Winter Apples, Mrs. James Wilson ; Siberian Crabb, do. ; Cooking Apples, Mr. Dark; Seedlings, do.; Green Gages, do.; Magnum Bonums, Mr. J. Rowe; Plum (other sorts), Mrs. Lewis; Damsons, Mrs. Gall; Melons, Govt. House gardener. Recommended—a small prize for com- mon Siberian Apples, from the same tree, to Mr. Seaman. Flowers.—Best Bouquet, Mrs. Wellington Nelson ; second do., Miss Pethick ; rarest House Plant, Mrs. James Wilson ; three best Dahlias, Mrs Wellington Nelson; best Double Stock, Miss Morris; Single do., Miss Morris; Monthly Rose, Mrs. Lawson; Garden Plant, Mrs. J. Longworth; Bunch Mignionette, Miss Beer ; Hollyhocks, Mrs. J. Lawson; Olean- der, Mrs. T. B. Tremain; finest Geranium, Miss Ilobbs ; rarest do., (none exhibited) ; best Fuchsia, Miss Hobbs; second do., Mrs. J. Bryenton; best Ice Plant, Mrs. Gall. The Judges recommended a small prize for a fine Begonia, to Miss Hobbs ; a fine Wax Plant, to Mrs. Gates; a fine Helio- trope, to Miss ; a fine Coxcomb, to Mr. C. Haszard. —@- DO ea-o-—— . Married, On the 29th September, at Rostellan Villa, Saint John’s, Newfound- land, by the Right Rev. De. Mullock, assisted by the Rev. J. O’ Donnell, | GAReT Annie HAwe, niece of the Honorable Lawrence O’Brien, of Saint | John’s, Newfoundiand. On the Ist instant, by the Rev. A. Fraser, Mr. Donald Currie, of nished proportions those who, he finds, have too much bush) which letter he condeseended to give no reply? ‘* Answer me | Dot 8, to Sarah, daughter of Mr. Michael Matticks, of Lot 7. for him. But the facts of the case are not yet fully detailed. We as-| sert that the late Mr. William Cullen died intestate, leaving one son, still living, James Cullen, his heir-at-law. If that | that, Master Brook’? before you state the inability of the | Government to purchase what your employer authorised you | to sell to them. One proof of the exhausted state of the Treasury, adduced | 1 On the 29th ult., at the residence of the bride’s father, by the Rev. A. Fraser, Mr William Edwin Hubbard, to Isabel, second daughter of Thomas J. Cuic, Esq., all of Tignish. Died, On Thursday morning, October 8, Witttam THArINe, yourgest son of the be the true state of the case, and it cannot be disputed—it is by this worthy, is so beautifully characteristic of the feelings | Hon. George Coles, Colonial Secretary, aged 8 months. clear that Mrs. Cullen had but a life interest in the property | of her deceased husband, and that the remaining interest vested in her son, James Cullen. Now, how, in the name of common sense, did J. B. Cooper acquire a right to the property of the late Mr. Callen? He had no hereditary claim, for Mr. Cullen, although his mother’s husband, was not his father ; and there | is no evidence on record to shew that the heir-at-law ever con- veyed his interest to his half brother. Mrs, Cullen could dis- | pose of no estate greater than that which she herself possessed, | and consequently could have endowed the magnanimous J. B. | C. with no more property than her own life interest in one | third of her husband's estate. This is the law, and the re- cords shew nothing in the facts at all militating against our statemeat of the circumstances. There is no record of a con- veyance from Mrs. Cullen to Mr. Cooper; but there is to be found a document from the Editorial Midas which gravely as- sures her, that he, having mortgaged hisstep-father’s property for £150, grants her liberty to oceupy it for her life —she paying all incumbrances and taxes! Now, let us ask, where, daring this assumed transfer of his rights, was James Cullen? Was hea consenting party to the transfer of his father’s pro- perty to Mr. J. B. Cooper? If he was not—and he was not —then has he, and not Mr. Cooper, the right to the property of the late Mr. Cullen; and should he feel inclined to return to the Island, and assert his claim to the property he has in- herited — which we think he is very likely to do—— Mr. J. B.| Cooper would speedily find that all the conveyancing he has | had done, with the view of placing him in possession of his | he entertains towards the Government, and the high degree | of ratiocination by which he arrives at conclusions, that we lay it before our readers as a specimen of logic a /a Douse. Hie says: ‘* 1 sent a warrant for thirty pounds to pay some sixteen pounds due to the Government for duties, which was Not content with himself proclaiming his own folly, he actually renders it more con- refused as being above that sum.*’ spicuous to every reader, by giving the very proper reason for the course adopted at the Treasury, in ttalics. Let him pay his duties to the Government; he has his legal remedy on any Government securities he may hold. However, the Vicar of Bray is recorded as having declared his intention of living and dying in that situation, and any attempt to deprive Mr. Douse of his lordship’s shoes must be opposed by alland every means, justifiable or not ; all weapons, offensive or defensive, must be unsparingly used. In fact, Mr. Douse, like the hero of the Burlesque to whom he bearsa very striking resemblance in voice, style and figure, has nailed up his challenge to all comers : «* Whoever ‘shall these shoes displace, Must meet Bombastes face to face.”’ FEMALE EDUCATION, Tue Convent of the Sisters of the Congregation of Notre Dame has jast been opened in this City, for the purpose of imparting a finished education to those young ladies whose parents and guardians may think proper to avail themselves step-father’s property after his mother’s death, would not con- | of the advantages of such an institution. The ladies in charge fer upon him the value of the paper consumed in the disrepu- of it arrived here a few weeks ago from Montreal, under the table transaction. We think our readers will agree with us, that the more it | is considered the more the vaunted filial love, &e., towards his *‘aged and honored mother,’’ becomes fine by degrees and | beautifully less. In short, that in viewing this part of the i ' } care of the zealous and excellent priest stationed at Tignish— the Rev. Peter MacIntyre; and we are informed that they bear a high reputation for learning and proficiency in all those accomplishments which form a graceful accompaniment to the moral and intellectual training of young ladies. Al- though the Convent may be considered sectarian in its cha- question—*‘ "Tis distance lends enchantment to the view,”’ that | racter, from its being’ an institution peculiar to the Catholic the filial love, &e., like a good many pictorial illusions, looks well enough until too near approach dispels all the poetry of the conception and execution, and shows the coarse material somewhat clumsily applied. ern Mr. Cooper is very greatly incensed at gur having taken, as he says, “liberties with his private affairs.”” We madé no| allusion to Mr. C. or his “ affairs,’’ publie or private, until ‘he first displayed his stupidity and malevolence in opening his | columns to the vilest attacks upon the private character of | some of his political adversaries ; and all that we have since | written in reference to him has been called forth by further’ exhibitions of his folly. In his paper of the Ist instant, after whining over the merited punishment we inflicted upon him, he gives utterance to some slanderous insinuations against us, which he has put in a supposititious form, for, knowing them to he false, he dared not express them openly. Mr. J. B.C. may ** suppose’’ what he pleases about us, but a warning from that undying monitor in his own breast, which no amount of false- hood and tergiversatic¢n can stifle, will deter him from accusing us, even by supposition, with basely deserting our family—| leaving them to privation and want—while we, on our travels, | were enjoying those means which should haye been sacred to their maintenance—even to the value of a paltry cow,—that, instead of making common cause with them in weal or woe, | in sickness or in health, we had—far away from their humble home, where we, their natural protector, had left them to | bear the heat and burden of the day—indulged in the amuse- mente, frivolitiesmnd dissipation afforded by the theatres and | saloons of the great cities of the United States ;—nor can he | dssert, even by supposition, that on our return, we had, in the | columns of a newspaper of which we were the ostensible editor | and proprietor, stupidly and falsely attacked the private cha- racters of those abuse of whom enabled ‘us to protract our miserable existence by the crumbs which feli from our masters’ table. Who would not regret to think that any man’s neces- sities should cause him to make such an exhibition of the weak- ness, or something worse, of human nature ? Who would not smile if stich a man there be? Who would not weep if he were J. B. C.2 + » Mr. DOUSE AND TIE SELKIRK ESTATE. Tur Monitor of the 8th instant contains a letter over the signature of ‘* William Douse,” on the subject of the purchase by the Government of the Estate of Lord Selkirk, for which that gentleman is agent. However proud the writer may be of standing in his Lordship’s shoes, we incline to the opinion that the latter would not be willing to represent Mr. Douse | as far as that yentleman’s published correspondence on the } ‘and by retailing many oft-repeated and as oft-refuted slanders Church, Protestant ladies, of all shades of religious belief, are here—as is the case elsewhere—as readily admitted within its walls as the daughters of Roman Catholics, where the blessings of a finished education may be acquired without violence being done to their religious convictions ; and we have no doubt that many liberal and enlightened Protestant families in this com- munity will co-operate with their Catholic neighbours in ‘giving encouragement to such an institution as that which has just been established in our midst, and that, ere the lapse of many years, the community generally will bear grateful testimony to the benefits which will have been conferred upon the rising generation by the aecomplished ladies who have so recently taken up their abode amongst us.. Ovr attention has been called, by correspondents and others, to an article which appeared in the last No. of the Protector, reflecting in grossly offensive language on the establishment of a Convent in this place. It is neither our purpose nor | Walker, From the effects of a fall from a seatfolding, on Saturday last, Mr. William Higgins, Joiner, aged 75 years. Passengers, In the ship Majestic, from Liverpool, G. B.—The wife of the Hon. P. Edwards, Esq., Lady and 5 children. Miss Miller, Mr. J. Foster, wife and 3 children, Messrs. A. Lord, Wm. Yorster, J. Vanider- stine, Joseph Neldor and P. Hughes ; and six emigrants. In the Brigt. Lark, (nine days) from Bermuda--Josepb C. Lightbourne, Esq., W. P. Nelmes, Esq., and lady, Thos. Thies, Esq, Mr. Monks Mrs. Penniston, and Master Arthur Haszard. New Advertisements. New Gocds just arrived from Liverpool! TO COUNTRY MERCHANTS & DEALERS. RR XTENSIVE SALE OF DRY GOODS, &e. ‘To be sold by Auction on TUESDAY, 24th November, and following days, at 11 o'clock, at the subscriber’s Sale Room, Queen-street, an extensive assorament of BRITISH MERCHANDIZE, in part, viz :— Bales gray,and white Cottons, Bales striped Regatta Shirtings, Bed Tickings, Cases fancy Prints, Navy Prints, Do. Cloths, Doeskins, Cassimeres and Over-coatings, Do. Orleans, Alpaceas, Coburgs and Lustres, Bales Cotton Warp (white and colored), Cases Lining Cottons, Castans, Web Braces, White, brown and black Thread, blue and colored Cotton Handkerchiefs, Shawls, Hosiery, &c., &e. mano A LSO- . TEA, SOAP, CANDLES, CRUSHED SUGAR, CURRANTS, STOVES, and a variety of other GUODS. Trerus.—£10, 3 months ; £25, 4 months; £50, 6 months; £100 and upwards a credit of 9 months will be given upon approved Joint Notes of Hand. Nine months’ Note will bear interest 6 months after the day of sale. Oct. 12, 1857. Isl. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. Turnips, Turnips. QO BE SOLD by Auction on MONDAY, the 26th instant, at 12 o’clock, on the premises, on the Lower Road to Wright's Mill, past the residence of Ralph Brecken, Esq.— 10 acres very superior Sweede TURNIPS, in lots to suit purchasers. ‘Terms liberal. Oet. 12, 1857. Ist. WILLIAM DODD, Auctioner. First Arrival.---Fali Goods. BR & SON have received, per “* MAJESTIC,’ a large SUPPLY OF GOODS, suitable for the season, which, for quality and price, can be recommended to the public. Im Oct. 12, 1857. Direct for Liverpool. TE first class fast-sailing Ship ‘*‘ MAJESTIC,” 540 tons, Epwarp Now1.an, Commander, having good accommodations for Cabin and Steerage assengers, Will sail for the above Port on or about the Ist of November. For particulars please apply to Ch. Town, Oct. 12, 1857. W.W. LORD & Co. Farmers’ Cottage. November next, the DWELLING and OUT- HOUSES known as the ‘ Farmers’ Cottage,’ on Fea,Queen Square. As a business stand, it cannot be equalled by any other in the City. There is very extensive Stabling for twenty horses, and every other convenience for carrying on 2 Tayern and Boarding House. ALSO,—In connection with the above, or separately, the business to reply to the Protector’s attack*which it supports, characteristically enough, by an extract from a work of fiction, | respecting the religious sisterhoods of the Catholie Church,— we repeat that it is not our business or inclination to enter into a controversy with the Protector on this subject, because | the Examiner, like its lay brethren of the press, wisely deems | | columns to be no wise conducive to the peace and harmony of | the community, and because nothing would afford so much | satisfaction to the zealots who sit in the editorial chair of the Protector as wrangling about the forms of religion, by means | of which the bigotry of their principal supporters would be stimulated to fever heat, and the sickly existence of a journal, | now for several. months in a galloping consumption, be thereby protracted. ~But while we abstain from replying to | the Protector’s extraordinary attack upon ‘an institution established for the sole purpose of promoting education, we | cannot but express surprise that any newspaper, laying claim | to the smallest degree of respectability, much less a journal which proclaims itself to be the most sanctified of all its. brethren, and a model of piety and morality—would devote | its columns to the publication of obscene libels, which, even | if they had the shadow of truth about them, would be a disgrace to the most profligate press that ever existed. | ———— LOCAL NEWS. IlorticuttvraL Fxuiprrion.—At the Horticultural Exhibi-| tion, briefiy noticed in eur last, the prizes were awarded as follows .— Vegetables.—Best Cauliflower, George Beer, sen. ; second do., George-Beer, sen. ; best Brocoli, (none exhibited) ; Savoy, large TUREE-STORY BUILDING at the rear of the premises, built for and used as sail-making and rigging Lolts. For further particulars apply on the premises. October 12, i857. (all papers 2 weeks.) rRXO LET, part of the House situated on the corner of Prince and Kent Streets, now in the occupation of the subscriber. |For further particulars apply to Ch. Town, Oct 12. JOUN KENNEDY, Saddler. G. W. MILLAR. Charlottetown and Georgetown Mail-Stage. eres subscribers beg to inform the travelling public that, haying taken the contract for the conveyance of Her Ma- jesty’s mails between Charlottetown and Georgetown, they will earry Passengers through with despatch, leaymg Char- lottetown every ‘Tuesday and Friday mornings at half past 9, a.m., and Georgetown every Wednesday and Saturday morn- Ch. Town, Oct. 12. 2w |ings at half past 9, a.m. Horses and Vehicles on hire at Southport, Vernon River and Georgetown, on the most reasonable terms. ig Parcels and Orders punctually attended to. JOUN ADAMS, jun. (all pa 4w) EDWARD CHANDLER.’ OFFICES : Charlottetown—Victoria Hotel and Globe Hotel. Oct. 12. Georgetown—Capt. John Macdonald’s & D. Gordon’s, Esq. | advantage. Southport—Edward Chandler’s. EXTENSIVE SAL F MOLASSES, SOLE LEATHER, COFFEE, BROOMS, Alcohol, Brandy, Spirits, Tobaceo, Wrapping Paper, Soap, Vinegar, Ploughs, Crackers, &e. To be sold by Auction, on THURSDAY, 15th October, at 11 o’clock, at the Warchouse of T. B. Tremarn, Esq.:— 100 sides Sole Leather (superior article), 6 bags very fine Rio Coffee, boxes Crackers, 100 reams Wrapping Paper, 100 bags Table Salt, 10 kegs Tobacco, 50 doz. Quaker Brooms, 12 American Ploughs, kegs Washing Soda, 3 casks Cid r Vinegar, subject is concerned, for a more sorry exhibition we haye| William Pethick; two heads of other sorts of Cabbage, and Wash Boards, &e. ke. seldom witnessed than that afforded by Mr. D. Having stated his readiness to seli to the Government for *‘ cash with no reservations,” which, according to Mr. Douse, are the terms’ prescribed by law, he offers to take good paper endorsed by Ralph Brecken, Esquire, the President of the Bank of Prince Edward Island ! According to Mr. D’s assertion, such paper could not be made by the Government, yet he has offered to part with his employer’s property for a considerafion which he admits to be illegal, and consequently of no value! But ' ‘Thomas Kirwan ; Vegetable Marrow, Mrs. W. Stewart ; Pum- Philip Cahill; Table Carrots, Chief Justice Hodgson; Dark | Blood. Beet, J. McCabe; Tomatoes, Geyt. House gardener; | Capsieums, (none exhibited) ; Onions, Chief Justice Trane 57 Eschalots, Mrs. J. Bryenton; Parsnips, Mr. Douse ; Celer 7 H. W. Lobban: Nasturtiums, Mrs. J. Bryenton ; Squash, kin, William Pethick ; lot of Herbs, Mrs. J. Bryentorn ; Bush | Beans, for winter u%, George Beer, sen. The Judges re-, commended a small prize for the best Red Cabbage, to Mr. G. Beer, sen. ; a fine Cucumber, to Mrs. Bolton. A sample of early Green Peas, being a second crop, produced from the seed of the first crop this season. ALSO, AT THE SUBSCRIBER'S SALE-ROOM : 10 puns. Molasses, 100 boxes Liyérpool and American Soap, 3 casks pure Aleohol, 5 casks and pipes Brandy, 5 palm-leaf Mattrasses, puncheons Spirits, boxes Indigo, 10 white Dinner Sets, 20 Toilet Sets, 20 Foot and Slop Pails, a lot of Crockery- ware, Glassware, &c. ‘Terms liberal. ° Oct. 5. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. OST, between Charlottetown and Bagnall’s Inn, Malpeque | | Wititam, fourth son of Dennis Reddin, Esquire, of this City, to Man-| rHXO BE LET, and possession given on the Ist of |the discussion of religious questions through newspaper! ryVHE «TONGUE OF FIRE” for sale at the book-store of oo premises. 55 New Advertisements. POPP OOO Cows, Oxen, Sheep, Potatoes, Barley Turnips, &c. O BE SOLD by Auction, on MONDAY, the 19th instant, ; . os o'clock, at WARREN FARM, the residence of John syall, Esq.:— "1 good Pere Ilorse, 3 Cows, (Angus) pure b : Coe a 9 breed, ete 3 by Sir A Banermin . yearling Heifer (Angus), 1 yearli all 3 Oxen, Angus and Dicken, oa = 25 Ewes, Leicester, 16 Ewe Lambs, Leicester, 8 Ram Lambs do 2 yearling Rams do 1 imported Ram do 1 Som Lot fine Brahmapootra Fowls, Lot fine half bred Dorkins and Cochin China Fowls, 800 bushels Potatoes, 400 bushels Barley, 1000 do Turnips, 10 tons Straw, 1 English Chaff Cutter, for hand or horse power, 1 English Turnip Cutter, 1 large Copper Boiler, 2 Franklin Stoves, 1 Box Sleigh, 1 do soapstone do. 30 Cattle Chains, Terms liberal, and made known at time of sale. 13° The Ferry Bot will leave Pownal Wharf at 11 o’elock precisely. Should the weather prove unfavorable sale to take place first fine day. Oct: 12, 1857. li Wu. T. PAW, Auctioneer. WITHOUT RESERVE! Oats, Barley. Hay and Carole Horses, Mares, Colts, . &e, rg°O BE SOLD by Auction, on THURSDAY, 224 instant, at 12 o’clock, at KEPPOCH, the farm of Dr. llilleoat, about 2 miles from the Ferry— 300 Bushels OATS, 150 Bushels BARLEY, 60 Do. CARROTS, Tons HAY, 3 very fine Brood MARES, 2 large HORSES, 3 Yearling COLTS, 1 handsome Saladin FILLY, 1 handsome Bay COLT, 1 Cart, 2 Sets Harness, 1 Engtish Saddle and Bridle, 1 Cultivator, &., &e. ta The above will be sold without reserve. ‘Terms or SaLe.—£10 and upwards, 6 months credit will be given upon approved Notes of Hand. Oct. 12, 1857. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. Notice To the Tenants and Settlers on the Western half of Town- ship No. 29, in Prince Edward Island. Pe & ‘Tenants and Settlers on the western half of Township No, 20 are hereby notified that Lady Cecily Jane Geor- giana Fane, of Upper Brook Street, in the Parish of Saint George, Hanover Square, in the’County of Middlesex, in Eng- land, is seised of, or entitled to the Freehold or Inheritance of the said Half Township, and is alone entitled to the rents, issues and profits thereof. Anp atso, that the said Lady Cecily Jane Georgiana Fane, by, Letter of Attorney, dated the [3th day of July last past, has appointed the subscriber her Attorney, for her and on her behalf, to enter into and take possession of and manage the said Half Township, and to de- inand and receive from the Tenants and Settlers thereupon all Rents and arrevrs of Rents now due, or hereafier to due, in respeet of the said Lands, or any of them. ANp axso, that the subscriber, as the Attorney of the said Lady Ceeily Jane Georgiana Fane, hereby requires all such Tenants and Settlers upon said Half Township, to make payment te him of all amouuts dae by them for René or arrears of Rent of Lands held by them thereon; and also, that in the event of their neglect or refusal so to do, legal proceedings will be instituted against them. Dated at Ch. Town, Prince Edward Island, 9th October, 1857. Oct 12. lm W. H. POPE. ointienaome pang ae —— —— ao — aati pmaaae—me liane Household Furniture, Glassware, Chinaware, Pictures, Oil Paintings, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Gold Leaf, &c. QO BE SOLD by Auction, on TUESDAY, 13th October, at LL o'clock, at the residence of Mr. Lawrence Warren, Kent-street, the whole of his HOUSEINOLD FURNITURE, consisting of— Mahogany Tables, Sofa, Chairs, Chests Drawers, Washstands, Bedsteads, Beds, Bedding, Carpets, Stoves, Oil Paintings, Pictures, &c. Aso—Paints, Oil, Turpentine, Furniture and Carriage Varnishes, Gold Leaf, Paint Brushes, &e. Terms—£5 and upwards to £20, three months; £20 and upwards, four months’ credit, on approved Notes of Hand. Oct. d. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. Horses, Cows, Sheep, Farming Implements, &e. &e. &e. revo BE SOLD by Auction, on TUESDAY, the 20th inst., at 12 o’clock, at the Farm of Mr. Tuomas Burrowes, West River, (Green Bank Farm), about 7 miles from the City : 1 Very fine MARE (in foal) half blood, 1 Large Farm HORSE, 6 years old, 1 Saladin FILLY, 1 Very handsome COLT (Mountaineer), 2 years old, took 2d prize, at the Cattle Show 40 Very fine SHEEP, 1 Fat COW 4 Ayrshire and Durham COWS, (good milkers,) 2 Carts, 1] Plough, Setsof Harness, with aot of Farming Implements, &c. ‘Terms Liberal. JAMES MORRIS, Auctioneer. Mon & Isl Bargains, Bargains. Unreserved Sale at Auction. ro BE SOLD, by Publie Auction, at Cascumpec Cross Roads, on TUESDAY the 15th day of October next, at the hour of Ll o’clock forenoon, and from day to day till all.is disposed of, a valuable and select Stock of English, American and West India GOODS, the property of Mr. MOSES RYAN, consisting in part of— Cloths and Clothing; Handkerchiefs, in silk and cotton ; Ticking and Shirting; Chairs and Bedsteads; Tea and Tobacco ; Casks Jamaica SPIRITS, Casks GIN and BRANDY; SLPOVES, Close, Cooking and Franklin ; Coburgs and Orleans ; Delaines and Cottons, in variety ; Ilats. Caps and Bonnets; Crockeryware of all kinds ; SUGAR and MOLASSES: Looking Glasses, Clocks and Watches; together with other articles in GOODS and HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, too numerous to mention. Also, at same time and place, that valuable and pleagantl situated HOUSE and LAND, containing 3 acres—is woil known as the ‘* American House,’’ situate immediately on the Cascumpee Cross. Dwelling House nearly finished in- side, 24 story high, 28 x 38 feet, to which is joined a smaller dwelling, one storey high, containing a Kitchen, Pantry, Sitting-room, and 3 Bed-rooms ; together with Barns, Sheds, land every convenience for a House of Entertainment, which business has lately been prosecuted by the present owner to There is, aiso,a never-failing well of water on This property is so well known that it requires no further comment. ‘Terms liberal and known at sale. Mr. Ryan, intending to remove to Malpeque, requests all persons indebted to him to call and pay the.r respective accounts before the 10th OCTOBER next, and save expense. Cc. 8. WUNT, Auctioneer. Cascumpec, Sept. 28, 1857. . ca If the day is unfavorable, sale to take place on the next fine day. — ——S— October 5, 1857. RARE CHANCE! Lands and Mill for Sale. om r "PDP ' “ QIN pre 5 doz. Barrel Covers, 5 nests Painted Tubs, Boxes Clothes Pins | ryxO BE SOLD BY PUBLIC AUCTION, on TUESDAY, the 20th day of October inst., at the hour of Eleven o'clock in the forenoon, on the premises, on Lot 3, Western Road, 150 Acres Freehold Land. with a Dwelling House and good frame Barn thereon ; toge- ‘ther with a SAW MILL, in excellent working order. Farm is in a good state of cultivation, and is well worthy the | attention of intending purchasers; and in the hands of an This industrious man, would yield bim a comfortable living. Further particulars made known, on application to Mr. Road, on the 13th instant, one WELLINGTON BOOT. | Charles S. Hunt, Auctioneer, St. Kleanor’s ; or to the Sub- Whoever will leave the same at this office, will be suitably | scriber at Cascumpec Point. rewarded. August 17, 1857. WILLIAM BELL. Cascumpec, Sept. 7, 1557. Ow ers ee Pa fe ic cc 0 Cee nN anc PN MIE St oreo cae, Qa Sac vee Tale eas a een FS eh eRe ee GI ee ie Bk TAME BOO tae SA SINE Ne SiS cg gl: bss aang i RCIRECION ° <li lth EG eee