HAez1uw'a GAZETTE. MAY 10. CONS'I'AN'I'lNOPI.~I. The meat importent uewe from Contenti- nople ie the diomleeel of the Sheik-ul-Ielem, tb lender of the moat bigoted per of the Mehom- in . w ere op to onienoipetion of the Obrietiene, and the appointment of n more liberal euceeooor. Sulpporbd by roeouce of bio En ieh and rench elliee. the Sultan will probeb be eblo to net with firm- . he Frank I in- thet the Sulten, in eoneidcretion of a loan from the houee of Rotheohild, heo mode over to them Peloctine, and the reveuuee derive- blo therefrom, no oecurity. Gen. Ludera baa arrived at Hireove with the main body of the ermy. E‘- o NOVA SCOTIA RAILWAY. the middle, or at meet, by the end of Mey ve inilee of reed it ie expected will be Iocetod, with working plane oomlpleto, rengy to be put under coutrect, end by t e c_nd of uric et fertheet, e further dletencc_of eight _or ten miloe, which it ie aup ecd will oomprioe the oeaeon’e operetion.—I4 urero, therefore, eeek- ing work, my pretty certainly rely ii ii full om loy in the couroe of another mont or no, et roniiinoreting we , end portion deeiroue of oontrecting for grndrug. &c., iiiey confidently depend upon being fevored at an early day wit op rtuuitieo fiir contracting. _ he preoeiit determination we learn in to lay down ten mileo of Ileile et the very least, be- fore the eeeoon clooeo—furniebed with the nooeeoery rolli etock, end knowin no we do the men who ve the matter in c rge,we have entire confidence in their energy an ekill end determination to do no much. end to pitch the worke forward on fact no circumetencee will at ell juetify. Advantegeoue oontrecte we leern have been entered into for the En i_noer- ing of the works end the expenoee of t in de- partment, it in acid, will bear moot fevourablc com rieon with the chcapcot conetriicted ro I even in SootInnd—eouic of which are re- markable in thet reepect.” Benton Noe-rii Aiixeiceir MANUPACPIZIINO Ae- SOCIATION.-—We oboerve by e lete En lioh peper that e charter hee been greeted by e En liah Perliement for e Cotton Manufacturing om- pony, with e capital of £100,000 eter_ling, to be ooeted in the vicinity of the Albion Mince, Piolou.-—Eoetern Cronicle. In Rueeie, if c. cerriege ie driven over any pcroon and injurco him, whatever may be the merits of the cane, the horaee are forfeited to the crown, end the driver, if e Rueeien pceannt, eentcnccd to be a eoldier. EASEARIPS GAZETTE. Wedneedey, my to, 1334. Hie Excellency the Lieut. Governor wee thie dey, at 4 p. m., received at the Colonial Build- ing, no uauel, by e Guard of Honor, end hevin rooeeded to the Council Chamber, wee pleeee to commend the attendance of the membcre of the Houeo of Aeoembly, in whose preoence, the Quoen'e ennotion wee given to the eeverel Bille thet had been peeeed b both Houeea of the Le- gieletnro; efter whic , Hie Excellency wee pleeeed to meko the following Speech :— Jllr. Preeirlent, and Honorable Gentlemen of the Legielolioe Council; fly, speaker, and Gentlemen of the Home of le- eeinbly; The time hae now arrived, when the Seeeion may be terminated. end you will not regret being relieved from your Lagioletive dntioo. The Addroee which you. Hon. Gentlemen of the Legielative Council , lately prooentod to me, hoe received my enxioua conoiderati- on; end I aeenre you, it in my deeire,to eoo euch a good undoretauding exietiug between the two Brancboo of the Legieleturo. ea may tend to promote iieefnl Legio- lation, and facilitate the pregreeo of Public Buainooe. Mr. spealker, and Gentleeien of the Bonn of Je- eenib .- I have to thank you for the Suppliee which you have conaidercd to be requioito for the public oervico, end they ehell be appropriated for the purpooeo you have granted them. 4 Mr. President. and Honorable Gentleinen of the Legielotioe Council; Mr. Speaker. and Gentlemen of the Home of Ae- eeinbly; I obeerve, with much regret. that no provieioii bae been made for the oetabliohmont of a Police force. ouch e monanre you are aware wee eteted by Hie Grace the Duke of Newcaatle to be " ii preliminary indiepoueible towerde any reconeideration of the docieion of Her Mejeety'e Government in reference to the withdrawal of the troopo from thie Colony.” I End by your joernale, that a Bill to eetahlieh euch a Force in Charlottetown had paoeed the Helen of Aeoenibly, bet it hoe not, it eeeme, met with the eanction of both licence of the Legielatnre. Should the Treope be withdrawn, I will look with confidence to the people of thin lelend, on any emer- gency tbat may ar'iae, until oomo provieicn be made for each a Police, or other force. an a Colony with no large a Population. ought elweye to pooooeo. Although for diotent from the 'oeat of that war which our Sovereign hoe been reluctantly forced into, I one care that you end her loyal eabjocte in Prince filwerd Inland are convinced of lho juoteooe of the ceeoe in which Her Majooty in emberlied, end de- egetty hope, that, under Divine Providence, her feroeo, both by ooa end land. may meet with trium- phant enoceee. I have now only to relieve you from your Parliamentary detioo. with my boot wielieo for your individual prcopority in your verioue avocatione. The Proeidont of the Legielativo Council then declared the l Aooeinbly proreguod until Iondey the 10th dey of July next. ‘Pun moot important and intoreetiag event that bee occurred oieee the lent General Election in un- quoeticnebly the Petition for the dioeolutioa of the Houeo of Aeaeinbly, end the enewer of Hie Excel- lency thereto. We any important, becanao a oyetom the principle of which in that the people are from henceforth, in ell that concerno their own domeotic and internal afniro, to be their own eelf gcvornore, having been once conceded, everything that coucorna the duo working of that eyetom ie of vital moment to every inliebitant of Prince Edward Iolend; end into- rootlng. hecauoe when an attempt io mode, at thie on early period of the eatebliohmont of Iteeponoiblo, or Self-Government, not only to abridge end weaken ite authority, but to introduce enother end entagonietic force, the etfect of which will be to nullify the oforte of the conetitutionel power, end thoroby deprive no of ell bonetite of the concoooion, it atfocte every_ men in the community ;— “And duller would he he then the fat wood That rote itoolf in once on I.etho’o whorl‘, Should he not etir in thin." It will, therefore, cell for no apology, we truet, on our part. if we continue to direct the attention of our rondoro—of whetover cloeo end grade they may hap- pen to ho—to the neceeeity of meeting thie attempt at ite flret onoot, end withetanding with lirmnneo end de- § terminetion the endeavor to convert one of the moat ] juetly valued of the peoplo'e righte into an engine for undermining the newly erected fabric of the Colonial Coneiitution, under the pretence of making it firmer end more eecure. None look upon the right of the People to petition for redreee of griovancee with more roepoct then we do; and there are none who would reoent more readily any attempt to injure or interfere with the legitimate end conetitutionel exerciee of it, then we ehould : end for the rceeon that potitioiie from the people are, or ought to be of greet weight care ehould be taken that the prayer of thorn ehould be euch on not to interfere with the conetitutionel righte of othore,nnd above all, riot to aeeumo rt tone of dictntion no to whet ehould be the mode of oxorcieing the authority that in conetitntionally voeted in the Lieut. Governor end the Executive Council. The I.iout. Governor, in the enewer which eppeere to have oocurod the approbation of thoeo to whom it in ad- drooood ae ofoctnally no it heo our own,heonerrowod down the queeticn no to the only point on which either he or hie Council can have a doubt no to the propriety of granting or refuoing it; end that io, who- ther iii conoeqnonco of the Act of laet Seooion, with rcopect to the extenaion of the Sulfrege. having received the Royal count, it ehould not at once he acted open. In ell queotiono that arioo‘ upon the con- otruclion of Acte of Parliament. it ie a rule founded in common come, and eanctioued by the nnivereel prec- tico of ell tirrioo, in ell tribuuale, firet have rocouree lo the worde of the Act itoolf. f om thoeo, end thoeo alone are, and ought to be , hercd the inton- tiuneof the ' aturo. Now. d ‘an ‘ with thoeo who are to decide upon their merito; oo‘ 'ehown,thoActieagaieottbem;tliotthoeo'lnotbleg imperative, in eny pert of it, or oven implying the! they have any claim to an immediate oxoecioooftbe privilqeo therein granted; hot, on the contrary. that it ie avoroo to the claim. There are many raaeoue why the Act ehould be left to the gradual operation clearly contemplated in the frauiingofit. It givee elergo eeoemionofvotoee‘ from a clean which beve hitherto been excluded from a voice in the olomion of mombore, for whet roaoone. it ie uoelooo now to enquire. It will he the rather for their benefit than otherwiee. that eome period ehould olapoe, in order to give them tinio to ooneider the im- portence of the new fnnctiono they will be celled upon to diocbargo, oo tht they may oxercioe the privilege with diocrction. end not enter thoinoelvco to be made the toolo of e tloelgniug feotion. Thooe who are in- voeted on a ondden with new end unexpected privi- legeo. are apt to ran into exeoeeoe; end it will be for . the benefit of the bland and the portion tholnoolveo that they ehould hevo opportunitioa of judging who will be the fittoet pereoao to ropreeont them. They ought to have time given to thorn to ace how the eye- tom of Reeponeiblo Government will work under the care end anperiatontlenee of men who have declared their intention of oervifi their country for ite own oelio. end not for the coho of the ouiolumonte of oflice. Having eaid thee mach concerning the Act iteolf, end having ebown that neither clone of the petitionere, whether compoeed of the dd oonotitiioncy, or thoeo enfranchieed by the new Act, have any right tocloim n dioooletion of the Houee, let no return to the prin- ciple which eliould glide than in their judgment who are to poee oentonco upo it. Hie Excellcncy’a en- .ewor eoncedoe that he ie, no a rule, to act by the edvice of bio Minietry; but Hie Excellency aoeumao that, in ooneoquonoe of the former not being liable to impeachment. “it in not only conetitutionel, but in- diepenonblo that in certain once the Q,uoou’o Repre- oentetive ehould oxorcieo thoeo prorogetivee which continue voeted in him, end for the urn or abnoo of ouch diecroticuery power no they confer. he clone in accountable.” Ae we do not admit the truth of the promieee, eo—with ell roepect for Hie Excellcncy—i we deny the conclueion. We are not uware of any one in which the Quocn’o Ilepreoentaiive in called upon to act in direct oppoeltiou to the opinion of thoeo whom the Conotitution lino aeaigned to him no hie reeponeiblo edvioero. We can ceeily conceive that conjuncturee may eriec when he may decline to act without firat aubmitting the oebjoct matter to the con- eideration of Her Majeoty’e Minietero; end even III euch coeo, hie conduct can only be juetilied by the to thoincomingthantotlio rotirlegAIlIIil|i|i|’“°'°7 the Govorninoet—-to the dociaicn of the former; we have no reaecn to believe that Sir Alexander will break tllnlgll the rule. dictated by the min of gun‘ "[3,, ug an eouteey that iedeefiotnoeo gentlemen to another. We are no ooertior. I!‘ W‘ hopomcroremheie poyiegoer|>II'I0I|I"'l’°°""‘“ we ought to be; but we have a eiecere f°|'5l|‘ Alexander Baneorinon, not only I0 0°°'PY"I ll” bigbeetpeetcf honor in the Cplouyl b-t_-H-L mu: we y have not elweye agreed in opinion with him. we have been, end ehell be at ell timoo ready to do him juetice; end we would, therefore. more willingly lead our feeble aid in the preieo of bio gouerel admi- uiatration of the atfaire of bio government, then eeerch or dwell upon whet we may have thought the rovoree; end it ie with tho wieh that be ehould act warily end cautiouely in no important a matter, that we have eo freely oxproeoed our opinion. We hevo been requoetod to otate. that the Electric Telegraph will be in working order by the end of thin week, or the beginning of the next; when the line will extend from Charlottetown to the United Staten. Nova Scotia end New Brunewick. A complete cot- tlomeut of tho afairo of the Company heo been made, and the peymant of ite dobte. liabilitioe, &.c., are guaranteed by oeveral of the woalthioot men in New York. Mr. Hertloy J. Giebcrnc he arrived in Char- lottetown, and ie buoy forwarding a Bill through the local Legialeturo, eimiler in come reepocte to one paeeod in Newfoundland, for ineorpenting the Com- pany, end giving it an oacleaivo right, for a particular period, upon the performance of certain ccnditiono. We ehell toko occeoion to recur to thie important eubjoct in our next. To run Eni-roe or I'IAIlAlI'l Gun-r-re. My dear Sir; In your leet ieeuo, I oboerved a letter to you, from the “ Roeponeiplo Agent" of the Temperance Cnueo in thie Inland, in which he otatoe, that I, in a letter to you, come deye eince, “denounced e diecueeion in the Temperance Hell," no" idiotic noneenee." I beg toetete, ouch wee not the care, nor my intention. I denounced no " diecueeion " in my letter that I can recollect, eimply remarking, that " idiotic nonoenee" wee blatod forth at the aforoeaid meeting. I can not imagine to whet euhjeot matter “ the Agent" intende hie extract from one Grindrod, L. L. D. to be pertinent, or what polite Society either he or Grindrod have lately frequented, to drew their ' ' that the the pert of“ drinking hcalthe ” imminent danger of tranagreaeing thoeo eopecial in etructiono which have emanated from the Crown for bio and their guidance. There in one point, however,‘ on which we think there can be no diepute, end it ie, that where the Qnoen’e Repefietetivo end hie Coun- cil dieagroo no to whether the former baa n right to ielorcile the Quceive Prerogative, the latter have the . .- . - .. . .....__ . m In lnIe_ now-e-deye, ncccooitatee or even inducoo hehite of intempcrance? I muetconfeee that the Swellowe (if Imey uoc the term), of Agent end Grindrod rnbet be capacloue, to credit the report of u Woot- phelian» Prince, or Dignitery of any Church, in whichever poeitiontho Biehop of Muneter received -n Envoy from the " Merry Monarch," drinking ot wieh of thoeo who framed end paeoed that Act, that immediately upon ite receiving the Qaeon'e appro- batioii ite provieione ehould be enforced, end thoeo to whom the right of franohiee had been extended ehould have the privilege of exorcieing that right at onco,they would have added a cleuee in the Act to that ofl'oct. The abaonce of any euch cleuee, and the genorelily of tho worde that the Act in to come into force " at any election heronfler to be held fore Member or Mombcra to eorvo in General Aeeombly," are con- clueivo that it wee not the intention of the Logiolaturo to interfere with any Houeo that might be in oxiet- once when the Royal neeent wee given to the Act, further then no vecnncieo might eriee from the verioue contingonciee contemplated in the Act II Vic., cap. 31, of which thie Act ie expreeoly declared to be merely an amendment. leiiving the unrepcaled provi- eiono of the Act ll Vie., cap. 21, in full force end otI'oct,—ono of which unropealed provieione limita the oxietence of the Houeo to four yeere from the teoto of the writ of election. In the worde of the petition, ae quoted in the enewer of the Licnt. Governor, he in prayed to dieoolvo the Houeo of Aooembly, " end thuo ceueo tho grecioue intontinne of Her Majoaty with reopoct to the oxtoneiou of the enll'rago to come into epeody ofl'oct. Thin ie, we proeuinc, a more futon de parlor, intended to entrap the ignorant,and bee no foundation in fact. The intantione—gra¢ieue or otherwiee—-are the intontione of the People of Prince Edward lelend, who eniictod the law; and Her Majeety hae done no more than oay—ao eho dooe to every Act of the Imperial Par|iament—" Let it be no my people dooiro.” Nor deco the circumotence of there being n euepending cleuee to the Act make any ditfcronce in the alighteet degree no to the conatruc- tion to be given, or non to be made of the Act. It in an Act of the People of Prince Edward lelend, ope- cielly aeeented to by the Queen, or rather by the Socroteay of Suite for the Colouioo. end iniiet be con- eidorod by the I.ieut. (iovcriior end the Executive Council no euch. We have eliown that the Act iteclf negativee any thing Iilie an iiniiiodiate diuolutiori of the Houeo end e new General Election being called in eoneoquouce of the oxtoneiou of the Sulfrago; now let an look to the petition itoelf, end the portion by whom it ie eaid to have been eignod. It will be ed- mittod by every candid end intelligent mind that thoeo who exerciocd, or had the opportunity of exor- cieing their right of eufliago at the election of the pro- eent hlonibore of the Aoeoenhly. have no ground of complaint on the eooro of the Frenohioe Act not being then in operation. They freely voted, or might have voted for whom it pleaaod them. The only pornoao, therefore, who really end truly have a right to think thomeolvoe aggrieved, are thoeo to whom the right of franchioe hao been for the tint time extended; end they, if any, ehould have been eolely end ooperatoly tho potitioriero. Bet upon whet grounde can they come forward and claim that the proeent Houeo ehell be dieeolved .’ They claim by force of the otatnto, end therefore recurrence meet he had to the Act itoelf, in order to eeeerteia whether iteoeforeoe them the rigtii to nielie oeeh eloltl. let. an we here mittoddtbe deeieion of the Queen hereell'. If it were not on. the Governor or Liout. Governor in invootod with ehepotic power the very entitheeio of Self or Iteeponeiblo Government; end no to hie being anoworeblo for the conooquencce—before whet tribu- nal, we would aelr, in he no aneworeble? Not before e Colonial one. no he would hlmoelf reply, whet then . bocomee of Roopoueible Government? It woe to avoid the peoeibility of the recurrence of Govcrnore of Colouioo acting on their own oegoetione. and me- king non of the prerogative arbitrarily end deepotie- elly, that Reeponeiblo Government wee introduced. And it h a quceticn well doeorving coneidoration, how far the note of Gevornore of Colonioo without the ieanction of the Executive Council are valid. The oorvant ie not above hie mentor. and we preeuine that the prerogative of the Crown in not greater in the Colony, then it ie in the mother Country,now in England the Queen can do no one eingle act without the aoeietonco end epprobetion of her Minietere; oven the bleoeod prerogative of mercy—the pardoning ofe criiaainnl—-muet be trenoacted through the Secretory of cute for the Home department. The Sign Manuel would be irioficient. unleee countereigned by the Miniator to whoee department it belonged, end ac- ncoompeniod by the eeal of otiice an an additional oocurity. And it will be—if ever it taken plece—c matter for legal determination, no to whether the note of n Governor of a Colony acting without the concurrence of bio Iloopcnoible edviocre are not to be regarded in the lfiht of thoeo of an unauthorieed individual, rather than of an ollicor in the due end regular diechnrgo of hie duty. There are ceeoe on record whore thie dietiriction hae been taken, end ouatained. It in ncceeeery, in an important matter like thie, that we ehould look at it from every point of view; end it in of equal importance to Hie Excellency. at well an to oureelree, thet the qucetiou ehould be thoroughly iiiveotigated, not only by Hie Eacollencv end hie Council. III]! by the public at large, who ore iiioet intereatcil in the iiinttur. We are not alarmod—-notwithetendiiig the ftlnlitrl which ere baeily circulated by thoeo who, in thie reepoot. are ecting eny thing but a friendly part to- warde Sir Aleaander—ihat he will act with reehrioee or procipitency in a matter pregnant with important reenlte to the Colony rind himeolf, and which rcquireo the grnnteot deliberation and caution, more particular- ly, no there in no occaoion whetover, for any undue heeto. There in another rceeon eleo, why llie Ex- cellency will refrain from being—ee the Patitionere or rather their leadcre wieh him to be—over arixioue togivo n heety decieioii in the matter, and it ie the circnnotnnco of liie having been olI'ored the promo- tlon to a government of more importnnco than that he now holde. ' It 'I oaid—-and we have heard that Sir Alexander boo confirmed the roport—thet a eucooeeor hae been appointed. end either now in, or econ will be on hie we, te the Inland; in ouch ceeoe, it hae been the ieverieblo practice to leovo quootiono of thie nature- thoeeerootdeohlon otwhiohareofmerelmpertaaee one draught, two quarto of Wine, (euppoeing it to be have been the vet y beat of Ilhonieh ,) I ehould further imagine that no eebor-minded human being would be, in the olighteet degree. influenced by any Act paeood by General Aooombly of the Kirk of Scotland, more then two conturieo einco, any more than any puriteiiicel hypocrite in Charlottetown, and methinke there may. vroret luclr, be one or more, would think of following any old Connecticut Lavr, to the elfect thet no man ehould liiae hie wife on Sunday, or make Mince Piee on any day. I do not think the Ageut'e quotation from Grindrod, on “ forcing henltli drinking.” worthy of notice, or that on any intordict on health drinking having been in French Court, in the Reign of Louie XIV, worthy of belief on hie bare aeeertion. I hed no wieh Dear Sir. to begin, nor have I now, to continue any controveroy with tho " Reeponeible Agent," hut, ehould he feel inclined to make any further remarke on hie favorite topic, I would feel pereonelly obliged, by hie informing me who Grindrod io. if he etill cxiete? Obligo me Deer air, by ineorting thie letter that I have troubled yo with, end believe I am Your obod't eorvent, STEPHEN SWABEY. Ch. Town Royalty, May 6. The hon. J. M. Holl, Treneurer of the Biahop- rick Endowment fund, acknowledges the receipt of the undei-mentioned eubecription. Georgetown, May d.—-Arrived, Solionor Loehiel, frorii Arichet, ll deye, having been ‘I deye in the ice. Married lly the Rev. .l.Sliaw. on iii. zeih April, Mr. grace Mcbenold, to Mice Mary ltoee, both o|"]‘}.p.. lvere. Port of Oherlottetown. AIIIVI . o la e. Schooner Coroo, Antlgoniilla I-I--8:-r. do.; Oth, Adalled. Boetong. Beaten; gee. cargo. eaieeo. In ‘I, Schr. Aimwell, Green. Pietoa; bnl.—Goo. Joloe. Malone. Halifax; ooo. 8th, Potril, Orwell _Bay; tolood—8onoro. Bnatico; do.—-Shannon, King. Pietou; b-'~—l-d s_«-mh. Biidic, St. John, N. B.; cate—Lallooh, vieeon. do.‘ do. 9th, Shgnbae, I-‘oloy, St. Johne. Newfoundland; pro- duco—May Flower, Furneeax, Shodiac; poooon- ore—Mary Ellen, I"orroeta Bodoque—-Carer. Ora ed; to load. _ loth, elm Ingram, Pictou; mule end paaoeegere. Died, At Charlottetown, on Friday evening loot, Mr. Patirck Gilligen, aged 14 yeere, late of Her Majeot 'o 74th irnont c Poet. 'l‘lio decoaeod one ie- charged rom the Army in December. I818, afler a eervico of II yeere, in which time be oorvod in nine gpnoral engegomonte. for which he received two odnlo. and a Poneion which he enjoyed up to the time of hie death. He held the appointment of Clark of the Fleur Market in thie Town, for two or tlroo care. , At Fredericton, on the lbtli April in her 74th year, end on the 48th enniveree nl h wedding day, Abi, the wife of Mr. W. H. ell. of that City. n neodo mornin , l0th inet., ot 9,o’nlock. John, filth eon o D. Red in, Eoq., in the lath ear of hie ego. Funeral will take place at l0 o'cIoc on Friday, llth inet. AUCTIONS. Extonalvo end Unreeervcd Sole of Dry Gooda. Tobacco, Ten, die. or JAMES uoenis. Y AUC'I‘l0N,et hie SALE 00M Qnoo ‘Street, on THUIIDAY next, llth inet., etl o cc . I20 Piocco Grey end White COTTONS, (aneortod ) 75 do. $30 PRINTS, (Britieh Manufacture) 20 doe. Duck, Corduroy, and Moleokin Tnowsigits, 2 Piocco DAMASR. 2 Pierce E Iieh TWEED, ldoz. Bill LE8, (Englieh) 5 Piocco OIL CIDTH, (for Tabloe) 2 do. DERRY, lo doz. BRACES; Zblbe Mixed PINS, ll Boxeo TOBACCO, 25 Half Cheoto TEA, (Warrantod). The above being to clone Coneignmente, will be cold without rcoervo. Charlottetown, May 9, I854. To be Sold by Auction, N Tueeday, the 28d inotent, at ll o'clock pro- cieoly, at Hazel Grove. Princotown Read, all the STOCK and FARMING IMPl..BMI’.N'l‘S of tlie Subecriber, conetoting o 2 Superior draught Horace, 2 Stud Horooe, four euro ol ; I nporior Carriage Horeo ; lo Milch Cowe, (Ayrebire end Durham breed ;) 4 lleifera, ‘I Oxon, 1 Plga, 40 llwoo, (wlth Lotnhe); Cnrte, complete, 2 Ploughe, end Harnooe : 2 Pair of Herrowe, 2 Turnip Drillo, I Roller ; l Horee llcke, I Set of I-‘ennere ; l Gig end llerneoe, 1 Wnggcn, Saddle end Bridle; 3 Sela Cert Harneoe, 2 Wood Sloighe, 2 Box Slede. And a number of other erticloe too numerouo to mention. Txeaee.—All eumo over £2 a credit of live monthe, on approved Joint Notee. WILLIAM BAGNALL. May 8, 1854. 1'’ ‘WW’ MILLER WANTED. ANTED by the Subocribere e etoedy men to take charge of a Griot Mill. to whom liberal wagee will be given. i.eo. Woman who in capable of taking charge of a A Carding Mill. ‘ WILLIAM & G. AGNALL. Clyde Mille, New Glaegow, May 9, I854. TEMPERANCE TEA. A PUBLIC TEA will be held in the Temperance Hell, on Pride I inet; the proceed or which, will be applied in defrn ing the or rice er Temperance Lecturore, in thie aloud, fort concu- ing your.-— ’l‘ickcte may be procured at the Stereo ofG e '1‘. Haexard—.I. W. Morrieon, W. Heard and W. . Dnwoon. Price three ohillinge ea ch. SHEDIAC PACKET. HE Schooner RIVJL will leiivc Green'e Shore on treenar next. for S cdiac. Daye of -ailing will be announced hereafter. 1851 £ a d Jan. 25th. Collected at St. Peiil’e Charlottetown l0 1 6 Feb. 2d. do. do. 6 ll 3 ‘June 19th at Milton Church 2 5 9 et Ruetioo 0 12 3 at St. Eleanore 2 l2 7 et New Lonlkin l 5 0 at Crnpnud l H 8 nt eorgetown 1 13 0 Ilio Excellency Sir A. Benriernien la’) 0 0 Ceptein Cumberland 10 0 0 Mine Penning 7 10 0 Mr. Heelem 10 0 0 Cuptein Bo llcld R. N. 15 0 0 Mr. Can a I0 0 0 The Chief Juetice 10 0 0 Mr. I). Izlodgeon 3 0 0 Mr. H. llaeaerd 10 0 0 Jominender Orleber I5 0 0‘ Lieiitenant Hancock 3 0 0 Rev. 0. Lloyd, Ecc'l Com. 5 0 0 Mr. Borrow 3 0 0 Rev. H. B. Swebey 6 0 0 . roopoct of rent or otherw DAGUERREOTYPE I ITO. W. MILLNER hnvingreturned to the Inland. be leave to inform the Lediee and Gentlemen of Char ottotowri and vicinity, that he in now ready to commence the above bueinooo, at hie roome (Great GGOIEFO Street) wherein he foele rioeurod, perfect eetie action will be given to all who may be pleeeed pg fnvor 'in with n call—-a top light heving been not expreeoly for the purpoee. lle line on hand 'e variety of Stock, varying in pricoe, according. 3. qunlitv. Plenee call nnd exntriine. N. Il.—Old Picturee retaltcii, «to. 8d‘, each. aw NOTICE, To the Tenonte and semen on that r .‘ . chip Jva. 23 formerly belonging to K.‘ Ill-3llI:‘.AS b Indcnture of Ilol ‘ - W date the Sthydey of May, 1854, Ian’ bum.‘ ed and aooured in fee to Daniel llod , or lotteiown, Enquire, all my right, timed freeliol intereet in and to the eaid tract of band, together win, all Route and Arreare of Kent duo thereon - therefore, hereby ivo notice to the eaid Tendon and Settlere, thet all onto now due, or lieroiilter to he- come due, are to be paid to the eaid Danlol Hod n he being fully empowered to grant acquittancsofei the come ROBERT RBNNIE. OTICE.-—Tho Tonarite and Settlere in en...» for Rent on that portion of Townehip No.1; zrmorly owned by Robert Ronnie, Eeq., er. ,.,I..,_ to y the name forthwith to the Snboeribor; and eleo all. came of money horaoflor to become the lg . I U0. DANIEL iiooooou. Cherlottotowa. 0th May, llu.