3%2 ROYAL GAZETTE. DISTILLE I! S’ LICE NSES. IST OF PERSONS who have paid License Duty for distilling Spirituous Liquors, from lst May, 1864, to the 28th February, 1865. 1864 QUEEN’S COUNTY. May 3 George Coles, Charlottetown 9 John Connolly, Charlottetown Common. July 4 Alex. Farquharson, Crapaud. 8 John McLean, Kintyre, Lot 33. Sept. 23 John Mattheson, Winsloe Road. Dec. 24. Donald Mclsaao, Charlottetown. KING’S COUNTY: Dec. 15. Pierce Gaul, Montague Bridge. PRINCE COUNTY: Nov. 19. Thomas H. Sims, Kensington, Lot 19. 26. Harold Craswell, Summerside. Dec. 27. Daniel Noonan, Bedeque. GEORGE WRIGHT, Treasurer. Treasurer's Office, 28th February, 1865. Council Oliice. February 20, l865. IS Excellency the Lieutenant Governor in Council, was this ‘ day pleased to make the following appointments, viz: The Honorable T. HEATH HAVILAND, the younger, and the Hon. KENNETH HENDERSON, to be Members of Her Majesty's Executive Council, of this Island. CHARLES DESBRISAY, C. E C. Marine Insurance Company of P. E. Island. ‘HE General Annual Meeting of this Company will take place at the Office in Water Street, at 10 o'clock, I. m.,on WED- NESDAY, the 22nd day of MAltCll. l865. No application for Shares will be recoived after 4 p. m., on Tuesday, the 2lst March. DANIEL J. ROBERTS, Secretary. Ch'town, 22d Feb., 1865. ex rw W AN ARTICLE FOR THE SEASON. INTERESTING TO EVERYBODY. This is the season of poetry. Sentiment thaws out with the snow, and expands with the early flowers The press grows eloquent on the tender grass. the unlolding buds. and other vernal vegetables. But, with all this elevation of the spirit, there are many afflictions of the llesh. Appetite. over-stimulated by the stringent cold of winter, subjects the weak stomach to dispepcia. and the liver to an overflow of bile. The blood is over-rich, and among the consequences are boils, eruptions. and other external disorders. in halth is a sad drawback to our enj iyinent of the glories ol nature, and therefore it is as Well, in advance of the leriid heats of summer, to purity the fluids of the body, give tone and energy to the digestive powers. and remove troiu the superficial vessels whose acrid humors which sometimes roduce a species of qfllorcsccnce, much less agreeable than that of the orchard or the parterrv. Under these circumstances. we cannot better serve dysp- epio or plethoric reader, or. in fact, any reader who is out of health or has had a premonitory warning of cotningsielb ness, than by advisig him (or her) to have recourse to [lol— loway’s famous remedies. Whatever may be the source of the dili'iculty, in whatever portion oi the system the seed oi disease may be entranced. lloLLoWAY's plLLS will assuredly reach the locality, and extinguish the disorder in its element- ary stage. They are peremptory messengers that will net be denied access to the most intricat windings ofthe internal organisation, and which no principle to health in any part of the human machine can successfully resist. This may seem a sweeping assertion. but there is a mass of authentic testamony to fall back upon, which will lully sustain it It is familiaraphorism that “whateverybody mustbe true," and it is beyond controversy that the majority of christen- dom use and praise [Iolloway's remedies. War demands his Ointment for its mutilated victims, and Peace requires it for her chapter of accidents. He who keeps by him both his Pills and Ointment, as standard household curatives. may say with Cato, though adifl'erent sense— ,-.._ . s. e, .___..__-»v .___..._a “ Thus am I doubly armed !” We believe in heingforc-armed against disease and casu- alties. as l‘ar nu possible. Some yearning a man was bitten by a cobra di capella in the Surrey Zn lorivnl Gardens, in London. A prep tutu" had been protiled which was said to he a certain antidote to the poison of this svrpent; but it was not at hand. and the poor fell iw Was fie id b- lure the remedy Could be lotititl. “'9' "It‘llli‘ n this front to illustrate the necessitv of luvin-z Hollow») ‘1: Pills nntl Ointment always within reach. 'l'nnt they :iiespeuifies fondue-tenths of the diseases of the human I'm-P sv-ems t.» be it llu-t estab- lished by com-insists p‘o .ll; aid if s i. the prot rivty ol' keep— ing them where thev in iy be. always llltI-lP ll'allt’lle on the mutant. llltli' it" obvious to the head of etery l.ituily.-- Cz'ncinnatti Sun. ANTIQUITY 0]“ THE THAMES, EMB\VK‘.\IE.\'T‘. Even residents in London (says one ot' the English papers“) requiri- to he reminml that tlnu 'l‘lmmo-s, in its present Course is to be (.‘Htliltlt’l‘t'd. as it has ho-i-n cal- le-d, an “artitirinl river,” almost tlll'mtglihlll the dis- tance from Richmond to the sir". But a walk along the. top of the O'IIIlMllltltlt'lll-\t':ill.fils lH'lH\\’ North \Vol- wich on the one side and l’luinsted on the other, must set any one of on engine t-rtng turn wondering about the time when, and the llt‘llllit' by whom, it Wot it altogether s: stupi-ndious as the em ankurml ol'tho 'l'hnines and reel itn stun ol the“ marshes " was ach- ievml. The earliest i'ul'virtii'o-s to llII’ mnhunkuients speak ol bin avhes in tlwm, and thus point to a still earlier period as ol'lhvir formation. Sir \\ illiotn Dug- tlnle thought that they tin-rte \rw ks ol'tlw Romans tlie Britons living Iltlt‘qtlol to tin-in; and tlw Saxons like- wise. Sir Christopher Wren, as reported in the ““al'Ptttnlin"ulso t-oni'lu'Ji-d that these Hnbnnkmi‘nts were Roman, the. SHXHHS being too inui-h hush-d with Continental wars. The lntc- M r .lanws \anki-r. in one ol lllS ri-pois to the Nntigotiun and Port ol'lmn- don Comtnitte, in l8“, spoke- ul'thvni as Works of the Britons undo'r Roman sup: rintvnili'nco'. Mr. R. P. Crude-n, in his " History ol'Giuvi-svnd and the l‘odt of London. “ doubts wheth-w the Romans had sufiicit-nt inducements to Construct Slit'll Works, asks why the earliest notico ol'thvtn is not till lam-r than the Norman (Jonqiiest, shows by allusion to Romney Marsh that the Saxons were. copuhh- ol'tho executi- on ofemlmnkuwnts, hut. liunlly l'rj=*t't.~‘ the Suitonsas well nsGundulph. llv qtlntt's from l'ltlstt'tl’n " His- tory ol'Kent" a record ol’tho foundation ol'un abbey at 'Nestwood. about a mile and threequut'ti-rters westward ol'lu'rith Churchz—thespot being represent- ed as “at the edge. oi'lhe murshesf’ and a t'uillCld- enCe with a similar foundation and position in the case ol'the Abbey of Stu-attord, in lll‘St‘X suggests to tho the probability that the. emlmnkment ol' the Thomas was commenced about the time when these monastic establishments were founded, in tho twvll‘th century; and he says “ these were not attempts to grapple with the dilliculty of restricating the chan- nel ofthe riVer, but a beginning at the foot of the uplands to make gradual approaches to the great line ofembankment that was ultimately executed. The earliest printed statutes relating to embank- ments are of the earlier part ofthe thirteenth cen— tury, in the reign of Henry III ; but they refer to a previous period They tend to show that in the reign of Henry 11.; or between H54 and “89, em- bankment had become an object of public importance.