304 ROYAL GAZETTE. Assessment on Land and Real iCstate in Georgetown and Common. Treasurer's omcc, CllARLU'I"I‘lC'l‘()\\'N, loth Sept. 1e67. IN pursuance of an Act of the General Assembly of this Island, passed in the twenty-seventh year ot the. reign of' Her present Majesty Queen Victoria, intitulcd " An Act to consolidate and amend the Several laws imposing an Assessnwtit on all Lands in this Colony. and for the encouragement of liducatioii:” I do hereby publicly notify the owners or occupiers of Land and Real Estate in Georgetown and Common, for which the annual assessment levied thereon by the Assessors for said Town and Common is payable, that unless the assessment for the current year be paid into the hands ol'Mr. Archibald MeKinnon, my Collector for said Town and Common, within the time prescribed by Law, pro- ceedings will be taken against all such Lands and Real Estate as shall then be in arrears for the non-payment of the sums charged thereon. agreeably to the directions of' the above recited Act. [ sep ‘36 Rio] .IA M ES \VARBliI-l'l‘ON, 'l‘rcasurei‘. Administration Notice. LL PERSONS indebted to the Estate of WILLIAM -‘-- COUSINS. late of Township Number Twenty, in Querii’s County, farmer, deceased, are required to make immediate payment to the undersigned; and all persons having any claims against the said Estate are requested to furnish their accounts, duly attested, within three months from the date hereof. to ELIZABETH COUSINS. Administratrix. JAMES COUSINS, Administrator. New London, Lot '20, 8th October, 1567. am ex 52in pd SHERIFF’S SALE. Y virtue of a writ of Statute Execution to me directed, issued out of Her Majesty’s Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit of William Cundall and others, Executors of the last will and testament of the late William Dousc, deceased, against Robert Damerell, I have taken and seized as the pro- perty of the said Robert Damerell, All the Right, Title and Freehold Interest of the said Robert Damercll in and to fifty acres of Land, little more or less, with the buildings and ap- purtenances thereon, situate on TownshipNumbcr (31) thirty- one, in Queen's County; and I do hereby give Public Notice, that I will on the Seventh day of October, 1867, at twelve o’clock, noon, at the Court Hence in Charlottetown, in then said County, set up and sell at Public Auction the said pro- perty, or as much thereof as will entity the levy marked on the said writ, being Ninety-seven pounds thirteen shillings and five-pence, debt and costs, with interest on the sum of eighty-.- eight pounds eight shillings and five pence, from the 4th day of October, A. D. 1862, until paid, together with 165. 8d. for writ, besides Sheriff’s fees and incidental expenses. JEREMIAH SIMPSON, Sheriff. Sheriff’s Office, Queen’s County, April 1, 1867. E. J. IIodgson, Plaintiff's Atty. [gap 19 The above Sale is postponed until further notice. A JEREMIAH SIMPSON, late Sheriff, Queen’s County, Oct. 10, 1867. BY virtue ofa Writ of Statute Execution, to me directed, issued out of Her Majesty’s Supreme Court of Judicature, at the suit of John Thomas against James Barrett Cooper, I have taken and seized, as the property of the said James Barrett Cooper, all the right, title and freehold interest of the said James Barrett Cooper in and to an that tract. piece or arcel of land, being“r the southern moiety in half an; of Town Lot 0. 3‘2, in-the second hundred of town lots in char ottetown, inQueen’e Count ; and dohereby give public notice that I will, on Thursday, the 17ti day of October, 1867’, at 1‘2 o'clock, noon, at the Court House in Charlottetown, in the said County, set n and 3811 at nblic auction the said pro )erty, or as much thereof as wil satisfy the evy marked on the said writ, being £42 debt, with interest thereon from the 29th day of May, 1835, until paid, and also £3 163. 3,1” coats, besides Sheriff’s poundage and all other-incidental expenses. THOMAS W. DODD, Sheriff. IIaviland, Plaintiff's Atty. Sheriffs Office, Queen's County, Oct- 17, [865. [act 3 HOLLO\VAY AND SOUTH AMERICA. Of the seventeen millions of various races, who compose the popu- lation ofSouth America, at least one halfis located beyond the reach of regular medical aid. It is no easy task to establish a system of business agencies capable of supplying these millions scattered sparsely through fifty degrees oflatitude, with the means of curing the difl'erent diseases to which they are subject. Professor Holloway, however, is rapidly accomplishing this object. His Pills and Oint‘ meat are obtainable in regions on both sides of the Andes, where the face ofa physician is never seen. The Indians and mixed races, as well as the whites, have learned to rate them at their true value, and whenever a fresh supply arrives at Valparaiso, Lima. Caraccas, Rio, Buenos Ayres, Montevideo, or any other considerable port, large quantities are dispatched by Indian carriers to every accessible point in the Interior. So anxious are the people ofthe agricultural and mining districts to obtain these preparations, that they will sometimes perform journeys of a hundred miles in order to replenish their exhausted stocks. The Ointment, we understand, is nLii ill‘Sully considered infallible for hemorrhoids, or piles, and as this disease is lainentably prevalent in almost all parts oi'Sunth America, the de— mand for the article is pi'oportionably large. The Pills also have flCqul'C‘d a special reputation from the. success with \\ liieli they have been administered in a special class of cases. ‘v'e who dwell in the tropics have very refractory livers. Sometimes they secrete too much bile, sometimes tooglittlc; and in either case the ordinary prescriptions are of small service. Thousands of us have discovers-ddhousands are (liscov-'ei'iii;1,aiid tens of'thousands will yet discover that these I‘ills regulate the flow of'bile, and purify that fluid, as well as all the other elements ofthe blood. The ro~ cognition of this fact has created such afururc for the medicines that the present iniportatious, large as they are, do not, it is said, tally meet the requirements of the sick. Professor Holloway does not find much favour, we suppose, with the old regime of the profeSsion. I'Ie isa revolutionist, and of course the conservators of long established stupidities look upon him with an evil eye. They consider it a piece of unpardonable impertinence that his medicines slmnld interfere with the progress of theirputients to another World. A similar spirit doubtless anin‘iatcd the courtiei's of li‘ei't‘iinaml and Isabella, when they assailed Columbus for assum- int,r the (‘Xlrfiil‘llCO of an undiscovered continent. It was contrary to their thuiry that such a continent should exist; for, said these wise- acres, ll it had existed, would not somebody have found it out before? Columbus replied by asking them to make an egg stand on its base without support, and when they declared the feat impossible, he per~ formed it, by the simplest process in the world. Holloway has ansivered the cav‘illers of his remedies in a similar way. Diseases that they cannot cure with a hundred preparations, he eradicates with one. Medical science had its “new World” as well as geography, and he has developed it. It is a world of blessings. its fruits are health, vigor, and long life. If'the philanthropist who liaanade this discovery did not hit upon it by following the mistakes of the past, ' but by thinking for himsitlf', and instituting new experiments, it cannot be helped. Columbus did the same thing in spite of the Inquisition. It is time, we think, that dogmatists should understand that erroris neither absolute nor immortal. When the. man and the hour arrive, itmust succumb. So far as the fate of the old medical practice is concerned. it would seem that the man and the hour have arrived —- El Mundo. Notice! MARE, hARNESS and GIG were left at the Sub- scriber’s premises on the 20th inst, by two young;r men who would not give. their names. The party or parties owning the some can have them by proving property and paying expenses. If not claimed within the time allowed by law, they will besold to pay expenses. GEORGE ELLISON. St. Eleanor-'9, Oct. 3, 1867. JOHN KIELY, do swear that I will, to the best of my 9 judgment, faithfully discharge the duties ofa Clerk of the Small Debt Court of Murray Harbor for the time I may be continued in office, according to law and equity, without fear, favour or affection, So help me God, JOIIN KIELY. SWorn before me this Eighteenth day of September, g one thousand eight hundred and sixty-seven. GEORGE HARRIS, Commissioner.