shamans” account, auagoouusaoiat Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, We,dnesday, .-/lI‘I.',IJ.I - -~-o»-. . ...rc—--- -u... '5') '/l iauusyagussa. - VNliVJfi__Slet'?le8. No. 88. Established 1823. Ha.szard’s Gazette. GEORGE 'I‘. IIASZ .\RD, Proprietor rind Publicher. l'ublislu-cl every Wednesday and Saturday mornings. ()iliee,Sout|i siile Queen Square, I’. E. Islttiitl. 'l‘ r: nits —-Annual Subscription, 15s. Discount for cash in advance. ‘units or anvltnrtallo. ' ‘ ‘ the space of 4 lines Furflm lines, lla.—l2liues: __ ‘ , inns, (I. Bil‘.-25 lines,_bs.— 80 litres. 5s. Bil.-—86liues,6s.—-and 2:... tor each ndiltuonal ' . One fuurtli of the above for each mntinuimce. ' ' ' " ' ' be continued ttntil forbid. Georgetown Mails. ' IIE MAILS for Gear «town until further Notice, will be made up an forwarded every Monday and Friday morning at nine o‘o oo . 'l‘llO:l~ OWEN, Postinaster General. May 2, I853. A BAZAAR. lI.I. be held at tho Tourperauce Hall, at Char- Iotlelowfl. cm Tlturuiuy, the l2th day of Jaiiurrry, test. to aid in the erection ofthe Parson age House, in connection with St. John's Church, at Crapaud. Contributions will be thankfully received by the following Ladies. mi. Jicivitius, MIts.'l‘. Dusurtrsav, “ I-‘rrz. tlanann, " E. Pausutt, “ Ctntou.r.. “ ll. '1‘. ltotcrr, BAZAAR. VIII-I Christian Public are hereby notified. that the V1 Ladies of the B.‘IP'I'IST CHURCH and emigre,-.r;itinrt worshiping in the Baptist Church, in Charloiietown, purpose lioldiriga BJIZJUIR in the '[‘..np.m..ce ||..|| on '|‘liuisday the 2lIth, December, to aid in raising lv‘i.-ads for the erection of a Town and Perth to the said Clrupel. _. Contributions in donations or work, will be thank- fully received by either of the undersigned Coni- IIARNITIAD, nnitco. Mlts. W. " J cGru:Gou.. “ D. Wiuoai. “ J. WIATHIIII, “ J. SCOTT, " J. Love, “ T. Drtssarsav, ‘ J. Cunrtv. Charlottetown, Nov.l, 1853. (All papers.) — Charlottetown Gas Works. NOT CE. 1‘ isroquested that all parties wishing to become Gas Consumers, this season. will give early notice in writing to the Companies‘ Engineer, at the Works, so that no time run he lost in laying the service pipes, and internal Kttings, which will be done ac- cording to priority, of application. ‘ Th” G," cmnpgny have engaged amexpertenced Gas fitter, from Scotland, and have Imported an assortment ol Lamps, Pendants, Brackets, &c., which may be seen in a few days at the Works. By Order. JOHN GAINSFORD, Secty. Oct 24. I853. Ingallflejrapers. A CARD. III-I Subscriber begs leave to inform the Public generally that he has commenced business as, Commission Icrcliant and Auctioneer. At the corner of Queen Sr. Sydney Streets, and hopes by proinptness and punctuality to merit a share ofthsir patronage. AlI.'I‘I".MAS G. SIMMS. % Carri advanced upon articles left for Auc- tion. A CARD. IIE undersigned having this day entered into NERAL U CO-PJIRTJV ERSHIP as (ill and .\l.\IISSl()N MEl{Cll:\N'I‘S, their Business here- tofore cnrried on by them individually, will in future be conducted under the Name and l'irm of LONG- WORTH 3!. YJTES. l"It.ANClS LONGWORTII, ALBI-IIl'l‘ II. YATES. Charlottetown, P. E. Island, June, lfiih, I853. The AUCTION business will at all times receive their best attention. Dissolution of Copertnershlp. U'l‘|Cli is hereby given tlntt the Copsrtuevship heretofore ilulrsiutiug between the subscribers under the llrin of citosstt RENDI-E. Tanners & Carriers, hath been this day dissolved, by mutual consent. And all persons indebted to the said firm are hereby requested to make payment to Christo- pher Cross. . CHRISTOPHER CROSS. JOHN RENDLE. Charlottetown, Mth Sept., 1858. N. B.—I.iksvrise all persons having any demands against the said rliel will please to render their accounts for sett srnent. J. S. DEA EY, COMMISSION IIERCIIANT AND Stat 1: Broker, .Mr. 7, SOUTH STREET, NEW YORK. I’-‘reights and Voss:l_s-procured, at short notice or Europe. the British Provinces, West Indies, Aus- trnlia and California. Bertha secured for the latter p cos. Temperance Hall Company. 1‘ ,A M ETING of the Directors of the above Corn ny, held in the Temperance Hall, this evening, t e following Resolution was unanimously adopted vis:- " Rusonvun, That the Treasurer (Mr. John W. Morrison) be instructed to take the necessary legs tueasures for the recover of all unsettled Subscriptions to the Temperance Hal Company." ‘ By Order, J. B. COOPER, Sec‘ . Charlottetown. Karol: I1, I068. TO LICENSED TEACHERS. ANTED u District Teacher of the Irst Clan for the Stanhops and Cuvsbead Dlstrict—- am“ person will use It to ins edvuetuge - - JAIIEI CUITII LAWKM JIIIO IN. IBII A HAD G’ D. I. HEARD, CDIDUIID as use shed the Ilsusvul Districts for sets at Gas. '1‘. Ilusaaa's Issl flsve. (For Haszard's Gazette.) To IIrs I:Ixcitr.r.s:Ncv-_S_ru ALIIANDII. BAN- ruuur. Sir; I shall now point out the difference between Joint Stock Banks and Private Banks, and the advantages of the former over the latter in reference to tho secur- ity and welfare of the public. 'l‘he chief points of difference between a Joint Stock and a Private Bank are: the number of part- ners,—the permanency of capital,--and the form of government. A Joint Stock Bank has invariably fired capital, and n numerous body of proprietors, who, while all individually interested in the prosperity of the Bank, have no individual control in its management. A Private Bank may consist ofaue or two pnitncni,witlr a capital varying according to the wealth or conve- nience of the partners. of which the public have no means of acquiring correct information. Ifa partner withdraws from a Joint Stock Ilank, it is by the sale and transfer of his shares to some other party.—but the capital of the Bank is not alfected, but remains as before; while one or more of the part- ners ofu Private Bank may withdraw from it without the public being cognizant of the "act—|.vaviug only men of straw to represent the llank to the public,iind the result iii, wide.spreading distress and ruin to its confiding customers. In it Joint Stock Bank, the paid up capital is kept, and exclusively applied to the use of the customers of the Bank, in the legitimate purposes of banking; bu, there is no restriction on the partners of it Private unit to prevent them engaging in hazardous specula- tions, which may not only draw largely on the means, but cripple the resources ofthe Bank in times of com- mercisl distress. when most required for the public use The government of a Joint Stock Bank is vested in a Board of Directors, chosen annually by the general body of shareholders, and they are sworn to secrecy as to the ufl'airs of the Bank that may be brought be- fore thsru. They should be men of experience, in any circumstances. and not in the way of requiring bank accommodation themselves. In a Private Bank all the partners may attend to the administration ofits affairs, and thus gain an unfair knowledge of the bus- iness trsnsactions of its customers, which nisy be turned to their own advantage in their individual capacity. In other respects. the business principals are the aims, and the observations in my former letter apply equally to bolls. I need hardly stats to your Excellency, that so highly are the superior advantages of Joint Stock Banks appreciated in Scotland, that every Private Bank in that country has ceased to exist, having iriost ofthsm merged into the Joint Stock Banking Com- panies; while such an event as the failure ofa Joint Stock Bank is happily as yet unknown. I leave the public to judge, from the foregoing remarks, which they conceive to be most conducive to the prosperity of this rising Colony: a properly constituted Joint Stock Bank, with an adequate paid up capital, and governed by Directors on the spot; or a Private Bank, ofa limited nurriber of partners, who may withdraw the whole or any part of their capital at their own convenience, and over whom the public have no control. But that one or other of them is imperatively called for in Charlottetown, is strongly demonstrated by the present distreuing state of the circulation. and the immense influx of Bank paper from the adjoining Colonies—which, besides the loss and inconvenience to the public, layl them open to fraud and forgery. I"rorn enquiries I have made, and the information in my possession, on this subject, I have no hesitation in coming to the conclusion that. under the fostering auspices of your Excellency, the establishment of a Bank in Charlottetown would be of easy accomplish- nteut,and meet with immediate and general support. I have heard at rumor, that a Branch of one of the Banks of Nova Scotia is to be established here. I"rnm my experience of Branch Banks, I should say, that a Branch Bank of that Province would not suit the wants of this Island. and in times of distress Prince Edward Island would assuredly be treated as an alien. Yours respectfully, @8OEIaLANE0USA.i~” snrr-ort’s nrtawsa. (From Harper's New Monthly Magazine.) A correspondent sends ns, as his “ depo- sit” for the " Drawer,” the following: " Some two miles distant from our city, there resides a physician, somewhat noted for his penurious manner of dealing with all those who may chance to fall into his ractice.’ Let me cite one of the man incidents relating to this gentleman, whic has happened during his residence here: " Some time since, in settling on account with one of his neighbours, the following items were rendered in his bill. It should be mentioned that he had a field of back- wheat immediately adjoining his lricnd’s house: M Mr.————— ~ To Dr.~—,Dr. 9“ To posturing Boos on Buckwheat, from June to Septent r . . ._ . . ‘“ To time spent In watching said __-’s Bees. 3 00 $3 63 " Such an account was of course refused payment; but the Doctor carried it up into . ‘the courts,‘ one oller another, but, after r all, had the pleasure of paying all the costs, l besides bearing the. odinin attached to such ‘ Itltsll p Now this, which we are assured by our correspondent is true in tall respects, is only. equaled by it like story ofa somewhat simi- lar physician, in acct-tain town in the region of“ l)owu East,” which shall for the present he niiirieloss. The story is entirely outlier)- tie, and istold in the dialect of tlioscpni-ts by it simple-rniuilcd narrator: “I ’xpect you've heat-'n tell of Dr. , hniu't you?” “ No, I never have." “Well, then, I'll tell you. You see, one day I met the Doctor at Sinipkin’s store, n-liuyiti’ sortie ;_vr~occrics. It was nwlul cold. I felt it little hoarse, and my, tongue was dreadfully fiirrcd tip. So says I to the Doctor, says I: “‘ My head feels it little achoislt, like: ivhut do you think I hail better do?‘ “ ‘ Why, li-icrid S——,’ says tho Doctor, says llC, ‘the best thing you can do is to go liouic and soak your foot, and take it sweat; ‘cause if you tluu'l,‘ says he, ‘like ns not you may have I]. fever.‘ ~‘ Says I, ‘Doctor, I was just a-thinkin’ that :1 little sweat would do rue good, and I guess I’ll go home and try it right away.’ “ Well, ldid; I went home. and took it bowl-full oi tansy-tea, bitter as gall, and if I didn’t sweat like a beaver, 'tain’t no matter. The next morning uiy head was as clear as a bell, and I was as good as ever I was. “ \‘\'ell, a day or two nllei-ward I met the I)m-.tor; and after it little talking, says the Doctor, says he: “ ‘ Noiglilioirr J ag’iu you .’ “ I looked at him dual, and says I, ‘./1 bill, Doctor?’ _ “ ‘ Yes,‘ says he, ‘ a bill foryou know, at Simpkiu‘s store the other day.’ " W'liat do you think he had gone and done? He'd act’ally charged me tew dol- lars for telling me to go home and take a sweat, which I was just going to do myself. “‘ \Vo||, Doctor,’ says l(for I didn’t want to appear small, you‘ know), ‘ it’s all right; I’ll bear it in mind.’ “ Well. a few days alii-.r',‘tlu-_ Doctor was pouring by my door in his-~ cliuise, and somehow or ’uothor one of the wheels got it little loose; so says I, ‘Doctor, el' you don’t drive that lincli-pin in an inch or so, that wheel will come off.’ “Says he, ‘Thank you,’ and he took a stun and'driv in the pin. “ VVell, I went into the house and jest made a charge of it; and when he came along the next time I presented him the bill: “‘ Hello!’ says the Doctor, says be: what on nirth is this for?’ says he. “ ‘ Why, it's for advice,‘ says I. “ ‘ Advice!’ says ho—“wliat advice? I hain’t had none 0’ your advice.’ “ ‘ VVhy, for driving in your wheel-pin, and I’ve only clrnr-gt-tl you two dollars twenty-five cents; and cfl lindu’t given you the advice, it might have cost you twenty times as much.’ “ ‘ Well,’says the Doctor, ‘the difference between your bill and iuinc is just twciity- five cents.’ “ ‘ 'I‘hat’s all you owe me,’ says I. “ ‘ Well, I’ll bear it in mind,’ says he. “ And I ’xpcct he will: he's as tight as it candle-mould, the Doctor is, and I guess he is able to bear it in iniu !" \Vc confess to ll degree of pleasure in the perusal of these “ diamond-cut-dim mond” anecdotes. 'I‘hey indicate that order of “ compensation in nature,” by which meanness so often is “ ovcrcouic of itself." And, in‘ this connection, we will close with “ one more of the same sort,” which is related of it Mr. S , an honest and highly-estcomcil grocer, for many years a resident of one of the larger towns of New Hampshire: It seems that a man had purchased some wool ofhim, which had been weighed and paid for. and Mr. S———hnd one I0 the desk to get change for it note which had been handed to him by his “ciistomer-." Wliilc standing at his desk, he happened to turn his head, and saw, in s looking-glass which was supended near him, a stout arm reach up and take down from the shelf ti heavy " white-oak” cheese and deposit it in the bag! Instead of appearing suddenly, and re- baking the man for his theft, as many a less reflecting person would have done, thereby losing his custom forever,'the crnlty old gentleman gave the thief his change, as if nothing had happened, and then, under the pretense oflilling the bug to lay it on his horse for him, he took hold of it, and sud- denly exclaimed: “ Why, bless me! I must have reckoned the weight wrong!” “ Oh, no," said his “ customer," “ that can't be so, because I counted with you, you know." “ Well, well,” said Mr. S-—, “ we won't dispute about the matter, it is so easily settled by just putting the bag in the scades again," which be preceded at once to do. “ There," said he, "I told you so. I lltougt I must be ri ht. I made a mistake of nearly twenty ands’: however, if you A , Pvt; got it little bill _.i, 5 1 .I.Ii';‘l.‘ ‘III I-.|,.’7 . ‘l""'{ Will“. the whole,-I»’ll tsltctu part) of it stint: It <lon’t iimlum-iy.t<idila tome.” ti‘ “ No, no!” said the victim-, struggling in, the wicked ti-up wliiclthu ltnd dnt~foi- his IH=I<."iln.-ur.,and st.oopiug..iho hands of Mr. 5“'."».‘"Hl|0 way to thvsltlliits .of.tho biig. " I,g}ices_I'll take tlie,.wlu2le,” . , And this he did, prt_virig,for,liis dishonesty by rcceivirn; “ skim-milk” cheese at the high price of wool! .i v 1. ' . ~ ‘ , u EDITORIAL Discotmsrt ruoimona or .1-mg‘ “ Puorr:ssi,os.”—“I-‘allow citi7.enti,.as you sprawl on your sofas this p|ussnut,ul'tei-noun, or make an inverted Z of yourself by prop- P|l|g;y0uI'chtiii- back against tliu wall, you probably think it must be easy to write whit’ you had it easy to rend. Did you ever plullgll. hoe corti, or plant cahlinges? “/0 have been ongngud in all this rut-u.l exercises, uiidlinvc also swung tboscytlia and cradle under: the hot sun of the South ; .nud we colcmnly ileclare that thephyeioitl labors aforesaitl are more l'eCl't'tlllu_Il8 in com- pnrison with the exhausted toil of writing l7)l“.llI¢§|>_res's inn close oflice, with it south- wei-itoi-ri _llSp0cI, when Illl‘. I,l_lf.‘.l'lll0IfI,eIel‘ is in the riell,-'lilri;r-liood ofthe ItltI_etiqs.'" ,' The Boston Post states that the poctuwho‘ attempted to plead a. “ p0etical,l§icencc"if0h “ vorsesof spirit,” was informed .:hy. -the. court that, under the Maine» law, ~hc..~must‘ .produce the license in court‘ 3 ' An crlitor out in Ohio has got eleven libel > He says he has been‘ stiits on his hands. disciissing law with the lawyers, so‘ ‘much lately, that it is hard work for him ‘to keep frotn cheating somebody. ‘ R.0’I‘HSCllll.D, with all his lioar,dings, was by no means a happy man. Dangers and nssnssinatiorrs seciucd to haunt his hangi- nation by day and by niglit;.und not without grounds. Many a time, as lie,nlri,uiotill'said, just before he sat down in. ‘liner. -ii» noto would be putiri his hand, running thiis,:“ If you do not send me immediately thcaum of £500, I will blow -your brains outl” H all‘ected.to despise such threats, but. they, nevertheless, exercised ndircful effect upon the niillioirerio. night before going to bed, antl-plaocrl. them 6 by, his bedside; nor did he think IIIIIIBPII‘. more secure in his counting-room than in his bed chamber. Tan Duo or -rur: Mr:ni-ranni.vr:.m.-- The whole channel of the Mediterranean must be sti-owed with human boncs. Cur- tlingoniana, Syrians, Sidouians, Egyptians, Persians Greeks and Romans-—tlier-e they lie, side by side, beneath the eternal. wu- ters; and the modern ship that. fetches freight from Alexandria, sails in its.whoIc course over buried nations. -It may be the corruption nf the dead that now odds bright-. ness to the phosphorescence of the waves. In the East they have a. superstition on this subject, which represents the spirits of the departed as hovering, whether on load or water, over the spots where-the ruins of their earthly tnbernaclcs are found; so that, in ploughing the l\'lt-tlitci-i-aiicnu, we sail tlu-oagli armies of ghosts iiioi-c miiltitutliii- one titan the waves. It is their union and throiiging rogctlier’ snys'thc Orientals, that constitute the phosphorescent: oftlic sen. Tris Sxarts Nu'r.—among the many no- velties in the vegetable kingdom which Southern and Central America have oflnte ‘years revealed, the snake nut is certainly the most cxtroardiuary. This is n produc- tion not unlike the English walnut cxlcr- rinlly, but smaller and smoother, ;altliou'gh ofiiesrly the same color. On opuuing it, we find, however, not a kernel, in the usual sense of the term, but is small ml, or at in the specimen now before us, an object least so identically resembling one, that the clos- cst examination fails to resent any direct nlfinity between it and t vegetable king- om, unless the skin or bus which sur- rounds it, like the kernel ofanothcr nut, may botermed such. This serpent is not, that we are aware of, found actually alive in the shell, but exists in a hardened state. It is of a dark brown color,- smooth, ‘and bound in a distinctly traceable coil, having up throughout, in every respect, exact dimen- sions and proportions of no ordinary snake. even head being actually formed. From the gentleman from whom this not was ob- tained, and who h s many more in his possession, all of which, on being opened, have invariably been found to contain ‘ snakes," we learn that it grows on trees found two or three hundred miles from Bogota, and that he was informed by the In- dians thnt- at certain seasons of the ear these snakes, issuing from the shell, increa- sed in size and were to be seen hanging aliveand in numbers from the branches. We pretend to ofi'er no solution of this ex- traordinary eni ma. It is w‘ell’known"thnt' many insects cposit their larva: in fruits» and nuts, but we hardly see how thiscx plnnation is ‘applicable to it scr' out whit: fills the entire interior of a she , and is at the same time so curiously identified wlh the inner orrcoating as to favor the suppoeltidn that it has "grown with’ its growth llIlI“l'Oll'tIlOlIOtl vrl its strength." Should this 'I(ePnI_I prove to be simply a ‘,veget_abl’o product likcitlte welltlthown snake cucumber, which, oh’ la largér scale, so much remindsus ofit; we can only regard it"as-,e most oxtraordiriery addition to the class of , natural wonders; We‘are happy to‘ lc‘c_,ifn’t|,tat the cotitents of this snake not will shortly be submitted to aclosc analysis by an eminent physician of this city, the i-csul'ts'ot‘ which we-trust, erie-long, to lay ' before our readers. A Rnanuvo I-Ionsu.--Whenever you ' preceive ti horse's inclination to rear, sepa- rate, your'relns and prepare for him. The instant he is about to rise, slucken one hand, and bond or twist his head with the other, keeping your hands low. This bending compels him to move a hind leg, and of necessity brings his fore feet down. In- stantly twist him round two or three times, which will cnefnsehim very much, and com- plet't.'ly‘throtV him-off his guard. The ino- mcnt you have finished twisting him round, place his head in the direction you wish to proce , the s are, and he will not fail to go forward; if the situation be con- venient, press him into a gallop, and apply He loaded his pistols every" the spars and whip two or three times se- ..verely. The, horse will not, perhaps, be satisfied with the firet defeat, but may be disposed to t '_ s’ 'n for the mastery. fihould this be thelcnse, you have only to twist him, &c., as-liefor-e, and you will find that in the secondstniggle he will, be much ‘move easily subdued than on the former occasion; in fact, you will_' perceive him to quail under the operation. Beau'r'trur.—-The_iie is a deep and bean- tiful meaning in the saying of the wife of Jagellon, Duke of‘Lithunia. Some peasants coming to her in tears, complained that the servants ‘of the King, her husband, had car- ried oll.‘ their cattle- _,She went to her hus- band, and obtsitiedinsent redress. “Their- ‘cnttle have been restored‘ to them," said "the Qeen, ” but who shall‘ I ‘give than back their l¢a_r.s'!” H ' Iniriirts Itinisa Srnswiys.—The intro- '.duction of riding "sideways by women in England is attributed to Anita of Bohe- mia, consort of Richard II.‘ ’She it was (according to Show) that originally show- ed the women of this country how grace- fully and conveniently they might ride on horseback sideways. Another old histor- inn, enumerating the new fashion of Rich- ard the Seoond’s reign observes-—“ Like wise noble ladies then used high heads an corsets, and robes with long trains and seats on side saddles, on their horses, by the example of theres ctable Queen Anna, daughlei of the ing of Bavaria, who first introduced the custom into the ‘kingdom, for before ‘women of every rank rode as men.” In the beautiful illustrative picture of Chaucer's Canterbury pilgrims, Stethnrd appears to have committed an anachronism in placing the most conspicu- ous female character of his the compo- sitions, sideways on her steed. That the lady should have been depicted riding in the male fashion, might, it strikes us, have been inferred, without any historical re- search on the subject, from the poet's de- scribing her as having on her feet“ It pair of spurres sliarpe.” ' A Wt-rrv Timon;-—Slier-.idan some- times met with » his match, sad that in quarters where it might have been least expected. He was one day endeavouring - to cut a suit of new clothes out of a tail- or‘s shop in the oily. Flattery was the weapon be employed. Upon my word,” said he, “ you are an excellent finisher; you beat our snips in the wyst-end hol- ow. Why don't you push your tbimble amongst as? I'll recommend you every- where. Upon rny honour your work does you infinite credit.” “ Yes,” replied the tailor,“ I always take care that my work gives long credit, but the wearers ready money.” , Trrunt is much of the plirest humanity, and u singularly delicate truth, in feeling that invests the roughest and most unpre- possessing occupation with a spiritual beauty when it is made it medium for the expression of the sympathies of the heart. Who does not fancy the flavour of the black grams increased, when an old com- panion or schoolfellow has shot it himself in the Highland, and sent it as a friendly remembrance? What man would not feel the comfortable warmth of apeir of Berlin wool slippers marvellously augmen- ted, if not entirelycrcsted, by the single fact, that they were fashioned by the de. licaie-fingers of sornebodyvrhose fair face liatli eclipsed to his eyes the beauty of the {rest of the world? ' What relation is the ssos-est to the scraper? satay‘ '."‘-'“