Ming" him a table, and providing him a home ; but there ices‘still more important. which it is their duty to per- It is allowed them as a privilngeas well as enjoined upon "duty, to minister to the temporal wants of his body the y feeding the hungry ,giving drink to the thirsty, enter- fie stranger. clothing the naked, visiting: the sick, and “who are in prison and these things done unto the least 0f " ~Wfien, he takes as done tinto himself; but above all, they red to administer to the spiritual wants of his church ; me given to Peter, may be viewed as given to every dis- me Saviour throughout all time, “Feed my Sheep ;” (has other sheep to bring, which are not of this fold, “amp which are wandering in alosfstate in heathen lands, . norGospel dispensation is enjoyed, to Christians is sled the instrutnentality of seeking them out, and bringing mime, ,tfihat. there maybe one Shepherd, and one Sheep— . "The express command to all Christians from the lips of Lord is, “Go into all the world” In, obedience to this d all should go forth. employing their prayers, their k, their talents, their influences. and every means which "fiath’put in' their power for the furtherance of the kingdom 'g;'and the mountain of the Lord’s house shrill sbon he fled ;" instead of the thorn shall come up the fir tree ;” god instead of the briar shall be the myrtle tree,” and it shall me Lord for a name, for an everlasting sign, that shall not 0E)” , stands of your Society for the present year are .625 13 7. ‘ Ecummittee recommend that.the sum of £12 be remitted i: V ritish and Foreign Bible Society, and the sum of £12 to J: and Mls‘lonflrv SQCiely in connection with the Presby- ‘Mhurch of Nova Scotta. and that the balance be appropri- Mfi; the purchase oftracts from the Tract Society in Charlotte- ‘ .bearers for the ensuing year : . Rev; John Kier, President. Hon. P. S. McNutt, . Robert Craig, sen. 17'“ do‘ George Beairsto, Treasurer. \William Beairsto, Secretary. . » ng .ee.——Benjamin Bcairsto, sen., DonaldRamsny, William N mfisq“ George Thomsnn, sen, Ncil Taylor, James Mont- m, William McKenzie. . (well, That the Secretary request. that the Publishers of ' Mspapers, in Charlottetown, will have the kindness to in-‘ the above report. “’11. BE AIRSTO, Sec’y. a. j , HIGHLAND SOCIETY celebrated its Aiiniversary at fife, Wellington Hotel, on Wednesday, the 215t ult. The Mag associations connected with this meeting are too "i nown to require comment; and the large and. res- e attendance of Members on the occasion tended to the interest heretofore excited in the objects ofthe ion. The different celebrations are so managed as ,withdraw from the funds ofthe Society any portion ' printed to its benevolent purposes. or the Secretaries had made a statement of the experi- , and the Treasurer of‘thc funds in hand, the follow- Gnntlemeu were elected Office Bearers for the ensuing lElie Honorable Charles Young, President. _ ‘ M‘Gill and Patrick Walker, Esqrs., Vice Presidents. i, aers. W. M‘Gill 81. John M‘Neill (re-elected), Secretaries. Kenneth M‘Kenzie, (do) Treasurer. 5 serous—William Clark, Esq, M. P. P., Donald Mont- q.. M. P. P., Alexander M‘Lean, Esq., M. P. P., M‘Donell, Robert Finluyson and Joseph Mac- lttsqrs. _ , ral ew Me hers were then elected by ballot, after (acting a journcd. ‘ h . . Imago—One of the": most interesting 'of the sol/Summon delivered on Wednesday evening ' fiomfioddiegiof Cavendish, on The Deluge. stormy and unfavorable, btit a sufliciently “totshow that the Institute generally nible recollection of the Rev. Mr. d’s"ii'I‘ecttti'er 'before them, and 1&3 fi'om heafing him again. The iniofe‘sting in itself, was treated in a manner nteresiing.‘ The topics for illustration advan- l-cturor Were the followingz—g'l‘o establish the —to define the extent to which it prevailed be causes by which it was produced—to portant consequences to the earth—and to arious objections with which it has been assail- pics were taken up seriatim, and the various ' mined respecting them illustrated and confirm- fated, according to the opinions entertained by the uflomambifnself. The deepest attention was paid 1 , ethroughout, and a protracted discussion follow- tified ' the grateful feelings of the audience H _ cttirer, and manifested a convxction that the ' n‘o’f such subjects ought to make us all better as well - men. (rhino the adjournment, an apology was made for Madurai the time of an acknowledgment indue form Kate’s sense ofobligation to D. M‘Lcan, Esq. of ‘ (lop, for his truly scientific Lecture, on Practical A4. and Mr. M‘Lcnn was unanimously elected an ' yMember of the Institute. Dr; Conroy, who has u been too busily engaged in the duties of his 'u—for which, unhappily, this season, there have everywhere too frequent calls—is expected, on next dfleflloy evening, to redeem his pledge to deliver a Ilecture on “Animal Physiology.”—Com. ANIbs‘ 1N 95 Wednesday evening a disturbance took place at the r i gum Hotel, at about ten o’clock, when great violence used towards the inmates of the house, one of whom his finger severely bitten. Wm. Cundall, Esq. J. P. was ' on, and meeting the parties outside, was severely all by them, as was likewise Moses Hayes, a constable, Was pursued down the street where he resides. On y 'fe hearing his cries, she ran out, when she was stabbed o of the rufiians, and her life is considered in danger. awerc sworn. before Donald Macdonald and Esqrs., against such of the parties as are - issued for their apprehension; and it 5 who cotnmitted this entirely unpro- speedily brought to justice. icutenant Governor has called the _- Assembly to the subject; and a has been offered for the apprehen- wounded Mys. Hayes. byterian Congregation of Charlotte- e Rev. John M‘Lennan, of Pinette, it Gown, in testimony oftheir esteem e for his services during the period in a stated clergyman of their own. «BS, . _ .—We understand that the recommendation commission now sitting to inquire into the present at keeping the purers’ accounts, and the pay and ~' ms of these officers, will be for an alteration in the In purser to, cotnniissariat Storekeeper; and these to have afixed salary—the maximum will be £500 um,__full pay, and the half-pay will vary from 8s. 6d. per diam-Devonport Telegraph. demand that the Lieut. Governor, in his anxiety to the cause of total abstinence from intoxicating I the Indians, intends to have silver medals , presented to them aft 1' they have kept the rtwelu'months. We understand also, that it has been ‘ 10er Excellency to make a‘general presenta- 0 Hum. 3 TH: Em’ron or THE COLONIAL HERALD. \ been much .etruck by a passage in a letter (1’. K,” inserted In your paper of Saturday, Feby. will here transcrjbe, by way of text, to some ob- Inch ‘1 take this mode of submitting to the atten- tn It may concern :— ' mired urea, with a frontage of from eight to ten .L medals to the tee-totallers ,in the Province.—SI. “Glands let in, a wilderness state, in tracts offi-om~ all” (no chains to the hundred acres, on a brook, or road or river? 5%nd is not rent exacted tiir swu np, and burrons, and lion witlinn’tidnv tibtitemetll? And is it not almost impossible Willi, the Nutmeg! porSotitil exertion ititd privation, to. get ten to 7fifteen :tcreseclcuretl III as tnuiiyycttrs, during which time a rent hits accumulated, ut the rule of lroin ten to twenty shillings on each productive acre. lethlIlg-IIIBIPQUI' man in zirronr, in amount equal to what he can ublnlll tor bis improvements. il'lie is obliged to sell P" Now, Sir, I am not deeply read in the affairs of this Island, but_l conclude that these questions are affirmed in the ex- perience of the settlers, as no otie has negatived them ; and it so, then It is indeed time that the whole subject-matter of these leases, and the mode of granting them, should be brought under the consideration of some competent autho- rity, and no longer be entrusted to the hands of those who either have not the wit to perceive that the bargain which they efiect with the ignorant immigrant, is one pregnant withaltnost certain ruin to him; or, if we admit the more painful conclusion, then are, we obliged to believe, that these parties are fully aware of the result which awaits their unhappy victim, but are so influenced by the love of gaiiLns t'iotto be able to resist the temptation. The posmou which some of the proprietors at present occupytn the estimation of their tenantry is but an apt il- lustration ofthe great distinction which exists betvveen that t The Nationa AND FIRE “3 been The New Loan Fu INSURANCE, Hl’l’Uintcd - ompttiiies, viz . SUb Ne ' The Hartford and Protection Agent . ol‘ Assurance Society of fax. Piease apply to HENRY PALMER. OR SALE, 21 Leasehold FARM, situate about halfa mile from ’I‘rtivelleis' Rest, between Richmond Buy and Bedeque Bay, 34 miles from Charlottetown, consisting of83 Acres of good Land—about 15 Acres of which tire fit for tho plough. A story and a halwaolling House, 30 >124, completely finished 2i Barn, 32 a: 22, and a Store, 36 a 26, all new, and built ofthe best materials, are erected on the premises. A Brook of Water runs through the centre oftbe Farm. This form will be found very advantageously situated for any person wishing to carry on a Mer- cantile business. ' worldly wisdom which makes men acutely alive to momen— tary advantage (Often in: the cost of tnucliluture anxiety and trouble), and that enlightened spirit ofwisdom which. with more comprehensive views, rejects present profit for the purpose ot'securing an enduring prosperity. Btit the evil artstng from their short sighted cupitlity is not. confined to the billlly parties, it extends itself to all the society oftlie Island, begetting mistrust and alienation between those who neither participate in the grasping spirit in which it. origi- nates, nor possess the power to arrest its influence. A ge- neration has passed since the peace of this community and the prosperity oftliis Colony have been disturbed by the con- tests between some of the proprietary and their tenants, and as is the ordinary result, where parties disagree whose real interests are almost inseparably connected, both are ultimate—" ly losers. Year after year glides away, and the immigrant continues to arrive as ignorant as ever of the difficulties he has to encounter, and finds himself, after a few years, without even the hope of ultimate indepet‘tdence. Surely some angel oflightshould he c.0tn‘niissioncd to stand between the living and the dead, to stop this plague. ‘ The Eschcat question appears to have died by the indis- cretion and unreasonable expectations of some ofits advo- cates; but the proprietors of land in this Colony must never expect to repose upon a bed ofroses, so long as they remain insensible to the great responsibility which attaches to them, as the holders ofa property, the management or mismanage- ment ofwhich so materially influences the prosperity and happiness of the community. Ifany ofthcm ever cherish- ed tlio idea that the circle of their duties was comprisedfin the selling and letting of their lands, or in appointing Can Agent to do so for them, it is quite time that they should be roused from their delusion, and be made sensible that much more is demanded from them; that their duties and respon— sibilities no more end with the more fulfillment of the legal engageuients'contuined in the deed of assignment, than their duties as citizens are performed by their abstaining from those gross acts of offence which would subject them to le- gal punishment. Iti an enlightened society, all are justly ex- pected to labour in their generation for the amelioration and improvement of those who come within their influence ; and such as failto do so, must expect to reap that punishment whichjtist and enlightened views of moral responsibility will surely inflict—namely, the scorn and condemnation, not only of those who suffer by it, but also ofthose who have the heart to sympathize with their sufferings. The source of all the disturbance which has so long afiiict- ed this Island is to be fouui in the total absence ofcnlarged views, on the part of some of the proprietors, and the want ofaliberality corresponding with that which the Govern- ment at home dealt to themselyes. The British Govern- tnent could at no time have contemplated that, its subjects should be deluded into leaving their native land, to cross Atlantic, there to be sacrificed to the cupidity of'the land p' prictor; and she can justly demand, on their behalf, a reci- procation of that generous spirit which distingushcd her dctneanour to these gentlemen. ' It would require both mature experience and judgment to devise a general scheme ofleasing which would meet all the existing difficulties, and so accommodate itself to the mutual claims ofproprietor and tenant as to bind them for ever in amicable union, each rejoicing in and participating the advantages ofthe otlier’s prosperity ;.but, notwithstanding its difficulty, I consider it to be Well deserving the stutly and attention of all who wish for the internal peace of this community, or desire to promote its advancement. To set these matters finally at rest, an inquiry might be instituted into the forin and duration of the existing lenses, as adopted by the various proprietors, for the purpose of constructing a lease upon a sound and liberal basis, to be compulsory upon all. A discriminating tax might be placed 'upon leases ofa shorter duration than cite hundred years, and many other gentle modes of coercing a right adminis- tration Zof their properties might be suggested by those who possess a practical knowledge ofthe subject, which might, at length, enable us to look forward to It time when a body ofiiidepcndent yeomanry shall take the place ofa dis- contented and impoverished tenuntry. It is to be expected that some attempt would be made to raise an outcry against the lawfulness of interfering with private property; but when the holders thereof are found to be either incapable or unwilling to fulfil the duties which the possession of that property necessarily imposes upon them, the authority oftlie Legislature is only properly ex- ercised in remedying their deficiencies. . I have written these few lines, not because I believe my- self to pOSSess the infallible nostrum which is to remedy this fatal disease, but rather to draw the attention of the public to its discussion and examination; and I would exhort all who are able to suggest a rational mode of arranging a most embarrassing difficulty, to pour forth their treasures for the general benefit. I am no friend to that system which shuns to declare the existence ofnn evil, because no imme— diate cure is apparent. Every difficulty should be encoun- tered with a bold but steady hand; and where the tortuous entanglement is ofsllclia complex nature as to preclude the possibility of settlement by ordinary means, the Alexan- drian method should be adopted as the lesser evil. Liberality is the soul of all lusting prosperity; and this Island, which appears to have been disposed of with such a liberal (not to say) profuse bounty, should be the chosen sent for its exercise. When lobear,thereforc,'"of the hard bargains which some of the unwaryimmigrants have been deluded into, I am not surprised that there'should exist dis- like and hostility, where, otherw1se, we might have expect- ed peace and good will. There is no maxim of Scripture more fully confirmed by general experience than that which declares, that it is the “liberal soul which shall be made fat.” And I would say to such ofthe proprietary as . I pect, Reform your system ofdealing With your tenants—— Give long leases, and ample time to breath before you ex— act rent—Do everything in reason to facdttate theprogress and prosperity of the settlers—In fact, destroy discontent by the liberalin of your demeanour towards them, and a few years will pour a flood of population 'mlto this Island which will increase the value of your remaining lands in a tenfold proportion. ‘ Iam, Sir, ‘ A SUBSCRIBER. M DIED, _ I At Barburawiet Mills, Lot 19,_on the 16th Inst-.111 "1947”! year of her age, Catherine, wife of Mr. John Borthwtck. She has efta large family, and a numerous train of relatives, to'lament their loss. On the 3Ist ult., at Brackley Point Road, aged 23 years. at 11 o’clock. Recently, at Locust Vale, ' . , after a protracted illness, which he bore with Christian fortitude, a Mr. John Cameron, Mr. Phillips Calbec Moreton, oldest son ofthe late Mr. John Devonport Moreton, of this Town , aged 34 years. have hitherto erred in this res- ' The Funeral will tukeplace on Monday’ next,, . St. Clairsville, State othio,U. s, _ JAMES CROZIER. VVIlmot Creek, March 30.1842. ‘ CST, on TUESDAY last, the 22d inst., a Black . . POCKET BOOK, With the Owner's mime inside, con- tutntng one Twanty Shilling Note, one Ten Shilling do., and Four Dollars in Cash. VVliosoever may have found ‘the some and will return it to the Owner, James Cameron, at R. Hudson’s, Esq. 'I‘ryoti, or to Hudson, Esq., at his lodgings at Mr. Isaac Slmlhys, flrCllilecl, Charlottetown, will be handsomely rewarded for his trouble. Tryon, March 23d, 1842. MOBBfi-Qag’ VEGETABLE LIFE MEDICINES. IIESE Medicines are indebted for their name to their manifest and sensible action in purifying the springs and channels oflifc, and auditing them with renewed tone and vigor. In many hundred certified cases which have been made public, and inaltnost every species of disease to which the linmttn frame is liable, tlic litippy effects of Molfut’s LIIL‘ Pills and Phenix Bitters have been gratefully and pttblicly acknowledged by all persons benefited, and who were previously unac- qttaintcd witbdlie beautifiilly philosophical principles upon which they are compounded, and upon which they consequently not. The Life Medicines recommend themselves in diseases ofevery flirm and description. The first operation is to loosen from the coats of the stomach and bowels the various impurities and crudities constantly settling around them; and to remove the hardened fa; ,s which collectin the convolutions of the small intestines. ‘ er medicines only pnrtittlly cleanse these, rind leave such collected masses behind as to produce habitual costive- ness, with all its train ofevils, or sudden dintrltma, with its immi- nent dangers. This fact is well known to all regular anatoniists who examine the human bowels after death: and hence the prejudice of these well informed men against quack medicines— or medicines prepared and heralded to the public by ignorant persons. The second clfcct of the Life Medicines is to cleanse t|ie.kidneys and the bladder, and by this means, the liver and the lungs, the healthful action ofwlticli entirely depends upon the regularity oftltc urinnry organs. The blood, which takes its red colour from tliti agency of the liver and the lungs, before it passes into the heart, lining thus purified by them, and nourish- ed by food coming from a clean stomach, courses freely through the veins, reneWs every part of the system, and triumphantly mounts the banner ofheultli in the blooming cheek. Mofl'ut's -chctoble Life Medicines have been thoroughly tested, and pron iuncod a sovereign remedy for Dyspepsia, lcncy, Palpitatii‘in ofthc Ilcort, Loss of Appetite, Heartburn and Headache, Restlessness, Illtemper, Anxiety, Lnngour and Me. Rheumatism, Gout, Dropsies ofall kinds, Gravel, \Vorms, Asthma anti Consumption, Scurvy, Ulcers, lnvctcrate Sores, Scorbutic Eruptions and Bad Complexinns, Ernptive complaints, sallow, |cloudy and other disagreeable complexions, Salt Rheum, Ery- sipelas, common Colds and Influenza, and various other com- plaints which nillict the human fi'ame. _ particularly, the Life Medicines have been most eminently suc- nns almost universally prescribe them. iti taking the Life Medicines strictly according tothe directions. by the results ofn fair trial. . [13A Fansn SUPPLY ofthesc valuable Mcdicincsjustreceivetl and for sale by . COOPER & BREMNER. Sole Agents for Prince Edward Island. Charlottetown, June 4. 1841. . IIAT DIANUFAQT .v X. , JOHN HOBBS, IIat Manufactur'r, lately from Eng- land, respectfully informs the Inhabitants of Charlottetown, and the Island in general, that he has commenced business in the above line in the sho lately occupied by Miss Butcher, Bonnet- maker, North side. 0 King‘s Square, and trusts, by rendering a good article ata moderate price, to merit a share oftheir support. Getitlcmeti‘s Beaver and Felt Hats, Ladies’ Riding do., Beaver Bonnets, Children's fancy and other Hats, made according to the newest fashions. Old Hats cleaned and~ repaired. All orders executed with promptittide, and for ready money only. Beaver, Musk Rat, Rabbit and other skins bought. . Clittt‘loitctOWII,thine 11, 1841. HE Subscriber offers for Sale :1 quantityof Prime _ Newfoundland CQDFISH. ALso, 50 boxes of superior Philadelphia Soda, Water, and Butter CRACKERS, all ofwliich will,be sold low for prompt payment.. KENNETH M‘KENZIE. [rifle requests all personsindebted to him to come forward and make payment before the IStli April, as Accounts then unsettled, standing over Six months, will be put in a degul course for re- covery. K. M‘K. Charlottetown, 7th March, 1842. British and North American A— STEAM SHIPS. ROYAL MAIL 0f1250 Tons burthm and 440 Horse Power each. Under Contract with the “ Lords of the Admiralty." \ . ACADIA, Commanded by ALli‘gx-ANDEBERYRIE; BRITANNIA, do. ' , CALEDONIA, do. J. M‘KELLAR; COLUMBIA, do. C. H; E. Junnms ; Will sail from Boston and Liverpool,calling at Halifax, as follows: Steamships ‘ Boston. Fm. Halifax Fm. Liverpool “Caledonia” l —-va Nov. 3d, “ Acadia” I —— Nov. 19th, “ Columbia | Nov. 15!; Nov. 4th Dec. 4th, “ Britannia" Ndjv.,16tlt. 1, Nov. 18th, Jun. 4th, “Caledonia” Déc; Ist. §%Dec. 3d, j Feb. 4th, “ Acadia” Dec. 16th..»l .Dec. 18th, March 4th, “ Columbia” Jan. Ist. l Jan. 3d, April 4th, “ Britannia” Feb. lst. l Feb. 3d, j ——‘ 19th, “Caledonia” March lst. March 3d, May 4th, “ Acnditi," April Ist. April 3d, May 19th, “Columbia” May lst. May 3d, June 4th. Vines or Li uors, whiclican be obtained Passage, witltout ' £210 Ster ing—;from Halifax toBoston on board, to Liverpool, $20. , _ Passengers will be charged freight on their personal Luggagg when it exceeds halfa ton measurement. Dogs charged £0 Sterling each. These Ships carry experienced Surgeons. I The UNICO-RN ,plies betWeen Pictou and Quebec: m co“ t‘ 'tl tl‘ 1 ‘ not: too w1 ] usp ace. S. CUNARD & CO_ Halifait, Oct. 25, 1841 * a white POCKET, con- with some silver pieces. Deibrisay'sfi q" will be CST, on FRIDAY morning, taining various keys, and a purse Whooever will bring the same to Mr. properly rewarded. Flutu- lanclioly,Costiveness, Diarrhoea, Cholera, Fevers of all kinds; In Fever and Ague, .ccssful—so muchso, that in the Fever and Aguc Districts, Pltysici, All that Mr. Mom” requires of his patients is, to be particular It is not by a Newspaper notico, or by any thing that he himself may say in their favor, that he hopes to gain credit. It is‘alone :1 why, .A . ,. . 2m 0 BD SOL N . D . of Hartford, Con T Atitiinpx, ' at Auction 0 M . . . at] ’. i n. 0NDA _ And as he is furnished Wlll) blank Fort 7 39 ’ Jug Rinflockinmtmthe fine fastsaiIi “Se 11th m P05565510" of all the information which ,(‘jrb‘mrineflr Green’s Sliiwr’ where she now lies lig shower P9350“ who wish to effect Insurance—he will be i: ' Her Sails, Rigoin,r . The Alertis onlv siitten equue ceive applicatian and transmit the same to the Ageu Shief’ftlio best des t- s, fllns’ Auchors . en months cripnun. , and all her materials, known at the time of ROBERT HYNDMAN, Broker. T (arms [nude 1' 16.’ 1342. day 0 . the re nirin nan-g “all ‘ M / at 12 (Polockg, the . rth‘gefl' ‘ ‘- . On June 20th, at] ‘ l--(Nort - ’V“ burton's to Large’s Ferry. Wmh section" On June 215i, at 12 o‘cloc I 0" Monday the 4th mcncing at Hill’s Mills. m: ‘0 the lowest bidd On June 22d, at 10 o’clock, the Roa at 6. am. he" lorun‘s,commencing at tho New Western ‘ ~ 1 ills" Lot )8, I On June 23d,at 12 o’clock, the Road lent -.,, W ' peque to Kildarc Bridge commencing near the Doc "- On June 24th, at 10 o’clock, the Road from Kildare s to Tignish, commencing‘at Mrs. Travers’s. Same day, v o'clock, the Road from Kildare Bridge to St. Felix, Tienis , commencing at Kildare Bridgc._ “ ' 4 JAMES WARBURTON, Commissioner. —‘— Lot 11, March 12,1842. ".5- DISTRICT No. 10. N Tuesday, the 5th of April next, at the hour of 10 bidder, the making Montague Road, lending fi‘qni Murray Harbour: to Pinettc Mills—Sole to commence where‘left'hfl' last year; at. 12 o’clock, same day, Douse’s Road, lending fiom Murray Har- bour Road to the County Line; and at 4 o’clo'bk, the making of two Bridges in the chr Settlement Of": Murray Harbour Road. On the following dny,nt10 o‘clock, the Road leading to the County Line, Wcst end of Murray Harbour Road; andat ,4, gclockfiame day, the Road leading from Orwell-head to life erry. — On Thursday, at 10 o’clock, the Point Prim Main Road and [Campbell’s Bridge;and at 4 o'clock, the Portage Road and i Pinette Wharf. r “ On Friday, the 8th, atll o’clock, forenoon,;aising Finlayson’s Bridge, near the County Line ; immediately after, the Road lead-~ making a new Road from Wood Islands Back Settlement to the. Front Settlement. ‘1’ . On Saturday, tit 10 o‘clock, the Road leading from Wood Is- lands to Belle Creek Bridge; immediately after, the Post Road from Belle Creek Upper Bridge to Flat River Cross Roads ; and at 4 o‘clock, the new Road from “land Islands Road to Pinette Harbour. ' Sufficient security will be required for the due performance of each Contract. , A. M‘DOUGALL, Commissi’bner. Flat River, 15th Marcli,1842. - DISTJRICT No. 11. I ‘ HEN the Subscriptions for constructing a Wharf at Sandy Point, Wiltsliire's Shore, and for a. Vigharfat the end of Cable Head Road, North side ofSt. Peter’s Bay, are paid, I shall advertise -lbr the constructing of said What-yes. A cop ofeacb respectiveSubscription List is left at the hoqpes of Mr. Murray and Mr. H. M‘Lean, where subscriptions can be paid, and at the Subscriber’s Office. ' . ' i JOHN JARDINE, Commissioner. ' St. Peter’s, March 10th, 1842. ' ' . PHOENIX FOUNDRY. Under the Sliecial Patronage of His Excellency Sir H. V. {untley, Lieutenant Governor. NEW ESTA?L1SIIMENT. HE PHCENIX COMPANY beg to announce to the Public, the Establishment, at the old and well known premises of Messrs. Waters «Sr Birnie, in Charlottetown, ofa BRASS and IRON FOUNDRY g»; 1 and soon after the Spring arrivals will be happy ’tdgliiicéivejorders Stoves, and Machines for various purposes, Fire and Garden En: gines, on the most approved principles for effective operations. The. services of Mr. WILLIAM CROSBY HOBBS, a native ofthii Island, who is well Skilled in all tll‘ese various Branches, have been engaged. . GEORGE BIRNIE,~ Superintendant. Charlottetown, March 15th 1842. OLD IRON, COPPER AND BRASS : OUGHT at the PHCENIX FOUNDRY (Waters &. Birnie's Old Store), Charlottetown, in large or Small quantities. Charlottetown, March 22d, 184-2.‘ Estate ofJames Quinn,late ofChurlottetown, deceased, dtir months from the date hereof; Estate, are required to he paid to other- ment, within Eighteen Colon and all debts due to the said Patrick Gnfi'ney, on or before the First day of April next, wise legal steps will be taken to recover the some. M. REYNOLDS, PATRICK GAFFNEY, JOHN WALSH, Cliarlottctownflth January, 1842. HE Subscribers having been duly appointed the sole Agents of DAVID STEWART, Esquire, for his Estates on Lots or Townships Nos. 7, 10,12, 27, 30, 46, 47, and Lennox Island, beg to intimate, that they are prepared to lease lands, with at liberty of purchasing, and to sell on the most liberal terms; and [but all persons indebted to that gentleman, for rent or other- wise, are hereby required to make immediate payment of the same. a, 7 All persons found trespassing on any oftlie above. either by cutting Timber, or in any other respect, wt secuted with the utmost rigour of the Law. _ H. D. MORPETH, PETER EMERY. ropertiep I ‘be pm December 10th 1849. l . the rents and profits of those parts of Lots Eight an Fifty-two, .conve 'ed by the late General Fead, of the R0 Artillery, to the ate Andrew Macdonald, Ie nests the Tenan residing thereon to pay all rents and arrears 0 rent to him With- out delay. n DAVID ROSS, :- ’ Receiver in Chancery. Hillsborough River, May 1st, 1841. ‘ * Just published, toolscap 8vo., pp. 128, Price, Is.6d. single, [25. per doz. I . ‘ I MORAL RENOVATION; or, The Empire of Bac— - clius destroyed. THE PRIZE ESSAV. By the Rev. JOHN KNOX. . CHARLOTTETOWN: COOPER &BREMNER. I 10,000 bushels of OATS, ANTED to purchase, at the Store of nearly [opposite the Stora of Mr. for which Cash will be paid on delivery, MruCompton, Richmond Street, D "d Wilson. aC‘lliarlottetown, Feb. 11th, 1842; working a Saw Mill. A person of steady habits will b preferred. For particulars, apply at the Colonial Herald Office or to Mr. EDWARD Poona, Post Oflice, Pinette. ‘ . _v January 13th, 1842. ' ' ALL PERSONS found trespassing, 2“i V whateyer, on Lot or Township No-66, Subscriber, will be prosecuted with the utmo : ~ ._ CHARLES Morel, 17th Dec., 1341. o'clock, forenoon, tlic Subscriber will let, to the lowest, ing from Wood Islands to Little Sands; and at 4 o'clock, the ' for all descriptions of Castings for Mill-work, Farming Utensils, 2: LL Persons having any legal demands against the' are requested torender their Accounts, duly attested, for adjust; « 7 E Execiutors. HE Subscriber having been appointed receiver of ‘ WANTED, a steady active MAN, who understand I (2". . I . . -...._._‘.,,,..._......, ..........._. . "I... ,. A. . may? . " ,‘ . ' il l Wanna—r. .. mm 1.. .w. . - -