EASZARD’ GAZETTE. E.A.MEEES" JCEIRMAL. AME GSCIIIEEMSIAI. ADVERTISER. Established 1823. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Wedne sday, May 10, 1854. New Series. No. 136. ls.sxard’s Gazette. GEORGE T. HASZARD. _Prcprietor and Publisher. 5 ger5.TuMay eveiungpaag ?a|t.I:‘d.ay nioi-sing. .1 Q} . . I . 'ru'm—a.mi Subscription’. 15.. Discount (or cut- lu advance. TIIII OI ADVIITIIIIO. For the first iasertio ofl lines, D — works which were intrustod to air clainied from Messrs. Iaidlaw and Son, besides the expences incurred in finishing their work, which will fall to be deducted from the balance of account still owing them. Your Secretary, be now prepared a balance sheet which is now submitted to the Proprie- B.eportoftlieDirectorsottlie0liarlotte- towntlasscoiupany. Your Directors, on retiring from Ofice at the termination of the first year of the existence of the Charlottetown Gas Company, have much lessure in havin it in their wer to con tulste the proprietors on the com letion of the ' manage ' The Directors have had plans and specifica- tions submit (attheir desire) for a “I . . iuoludiagheas'l,Is.-6 lines, -.—l3l|0¢Ii Is. Gd.—-l0lines,4s.—N lines, 4s. 6d.—-25 liaes,_5_s. Soliug, 5.. 6d,.-)6 ings,6s —gnd id. for s_nch additional line. One fourth of the above for each continuance.‘ ‘ ‘ ' ' ‘ " ’ ‘ -illhceontisimlll nutil ferbid. EXHIBITION. N EXHIBITION AND SALE (for connected with the iscopsl Church, C town.) of fancy and use ul Articles, will ( take less at the Tenipersnce Hal|,on 5l’.I’.lI.' D. v. ) ys to them uient less than twelve months ago, and to g‘:;§°.:'h¥°°‘“°t‘°b::°'fgt°T;1e'§'°f°l:_'°::::':; ""'°“nc° that 'h° Comp“, I" now P" "d it is absolutdl niieoeseayo r the Mann or’ should ‘°. “'31”! ""° ‘“"“"“““' °‘ °"'“"°“°“°'"‘ reside within iii. Gates oyf the Work‘s, no time with as should be lost in doing so, and your Directors ‘lat of J une 1853. our Directors first On the - - m“ E . _ cmulmd on his _will close this Report, by stron ‘y recommend- aninypprrom n 9:13: ndllgmd ; and unit. menu ing.to their successors, to let this matter have their earliest attention. were then entered into with him for t e con- struction of the works—but revious to this with the acquiescence of Mr. cAuslaiid, they T0 "|¢D5"¢10"l ‘if "*9 C’W"I°“¢‘°'l’" G“ L537“ This small addition to their own lucubrations, and this large increase of portions 0 Scrip- ture, augur well. The different books of the Old ’I‘estament are marked Vols. I., II., and IV., while the one book of the New is marked Vol. 1., indicating that the publish- ers intend to carry the work'through in suc- cessive volume to the end. In the Old Testament they have followed Gutzlali"s version, without the alteration of a single character, that being the only one with which the insurgents were acquainted. In the New Testament, they have followed» the version prepared by myself and Gutzlalf in I835. This was the version whic the Bible Society declined when it was offered to them in I836. After my departure from China for England in I835, Gutzlalf fre- RELIGIONS OF TURKEY AND RUSSIA. The North Brilisli Review thus compares the religions of Turkey and Russia: “ It is not true, in the sense in which it is ordinnril plleged, that the Russians are our fellow-Christians, and that the Turks are ‘ Unbelievers.’ Both, according to our view of their creed, are ‘ vnis-believers.’ We very much question whether, if the matter were truly understood, we should not find that English Protestants and Scotch Protestants still more, have at least as much sympathy of faith and feeling with the Mahometan monotheist as with the benighted votaries ofthe Russian Church. The Turks pray to God only—‘ the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and Jacob;’ the Rus- th Ith dy of July nest. Contributions will'be hgd g ,1 ‘ti M _ ["¢u dso , . - . "’“‘“'° ... .. . . at i e: ' f g g. ' . e o owin s on w us aocoun - - _ - _ rs. l-avriaan, Mrs. D. Honosoit. yt::n:ncI)lll|latl:1ldIgl‘.,l‘lyJ:::?:::yDl2:Ct0l?Ie:n|t|':1t(,- for the delay find disappointment which has with the ahenmoll of °"'«.V “ ‘cw °h°":a°.t°"" and first point of all three comniunions— " ‘-UNDAI-I-. “ HOIIIII. 9,151, D!°Au'Iand ,0 ,.,,,,,,,,d b an; gum.’ occurred in the erection of the Company’s “mi “nerwards ‘lull °°'""d°"‘bl° "."'m°"s'. the Mahometan the Oriental Christian and .. --_ Dzsniuus, -- .E|:;;xuvs. B,-iimin to inspeiit the aiiparatus, &c Works. which were not improvements. tis one ol 0 I, own_aI_e identical “,0 an be“e;,e in II is I " . . . ' - - ' - " ll'l‘IGlIAl..Dn " A. YAAl..T|l‘l..I. ordered from Lnidhw ",1 son, “.1 1,9 0,49; First,_ On ni arrival_in Glas w, [found the earliest ofthese editions that the insur- one God and in Moses’ David’ and Jew. ”- H““‘'’' ' d h- 1, h ,1 mg, our Engineers essrs laidlnwan son ver far gents have followed word lor word as they - - - - " .. Hunter, 3“ ' 'l:i";‘:i °i ?‘'_“P ''x“' "5 hk."3' " behind with “uh, Cohmc, “much '0 t “I found it This faithful adherence to the Chri_st,as his inspired prophets; the last Charlottetown. ‘uh MIMI. 1554- ° °°“‘" .°' '°q.‘"'"‘ °' °.'“' °' "' ' Id ,, ch. ,5 1' - - ’ 1 ,1, .‘ . . we, in common with the Greek regard as The Directors in the meantgine engaf tlklfl 3°“ 1:0 t It”) |"V.°d';°w°:1h'i‘;)¥ “"1" » 0 text as it was given them, without altern- our Divine Saviour Both R'ussim and ' - rs us no in . - - - - services of Mr. Gainsford, as aster 0 or s P B demmon '“ we utnob tions or annotations, is one of the most Turk go further; the Inner add Mahomet_ COLONIAL and Secretary pro tem.. in Mr. McAuslandvp ad. The next planing features onhc case’ and encom_a_ the former add St. Nichohs, St. Cmherine, THE LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY. Govnniton-—-riin nionr i-icisonannn -riin EARL of IZLGIN and KINCARDINE, Governor General of Canada. _ Hnsn Os-rica—28 St. Jlndreie Square, Edtn burgli. . ' Board of Management in Halifax for Jhoiiu Stalin and Prince diosr Island- ion. M. B. Alincn, Banker. Ion: William A. Black, Bunker. 1 ., Barrister. obs Bayley Bland, ‘ . _ Ion. Alexander Keith, Merchant. smes Stewart, Esq., ' ' . lsdicsl Advi’s'er—A. am“ A? -Beer-stary— stthew . , tor he following gentlemen have been a pycinted Ofil osrs oftbe Coiiipsn in Prince I-Jdwar Island, and will be prepared to srnisli information as to the prin- ciplss and practice of the Company and the rates of Assurance. Chsrlettetown—Msdical Adviser—H. A. Johnston, M. D. Agent—E. L. Lydiard. _ Georgetown—Medioa| Advissr—-David Kaye, M. D. A ent—Wil|iam Sanderson. St. |ssnor's—Medical Adviser—-Joseph Bell, M D. Ageut—Tliomss Hunt. MATTHEW H. RICHEY. Charlottetown Mutual Insurance onipany, _ Incorporated b Act of Par isment in 1848. HIS COMPA Y offers the best guarantee in of loss, and accepts Risks at n snvingo fall so percent, to the assured. be present reliable Cs ital exoeds £1100, _Per- sons having property in harlotteicwn, or vicinity, should lose no time in. applying to the S ry of this Company for Policies or Information. I?’ One of Philips’ I"n'e Anniliilators has been purchased by the Company, for the benefit of persons insured in this Ofiice. In case of Fire, the use ofit can be Obllolfh-O2! immediately, by applying at the i ' , snnifl, . . W. HEARD. Pres‘ HENRY PALM!-JR S ec’y and Treasurer. Secretary's Olfiee, Kent Street, 3 August fith, isss. The National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society of London. CAPITAL £500,000 Sterling. Empowered by Act of Parliament, Id Victoria. A Saving Bank for the Widow and the Orphan. . T. HEATH HAVlLAND,I;r. Agent for Prince Edward Is and. {[7 Eco. Queen Square, Charlottetown. ‘ September 5, I858.‘ Is Eiiultable Fire Insurance Compa- ny of mi n Incorporated by Jet of Porliosisnt. OARD OF DIRECTORS for P. I-1. Island.- Hon. 1'. H. Hsetlsnd. Hos. Charles Hens- ley. Francis Longiecrtb, Esq.. Robert Hutchinson, e ., Tbosiss Dateson. Esq. _ etsohed Risks taken at low Premiums. N- ehsrge for Policies. Forms of Application, and n- ether information, may be obtained from ‘the Sub seriber, at the Oflce of G. W.DebIeis Esq. Lhsrlotte H. J. CUNDALL. Agent for P. E. I. April -in. isu. AI.1’..I.AN'OB urn .s.N'n nits: r.N'.sva.a.~'cs cox- i°.s.2v'i'. LONDON. ns-ranusiinii nv so-r or raunisisnssr. 0 £5,000,000 Stsrhii . CHARLES YU NG. Island. Agent for P. E. SALT“ E3553‘ 5'' ill; vs or e. A‘ r‘w BA‘ CEDTGE BEER. Jla. tetawn. Afltl II. 154. I013! absence, and he immediately set to work with the necessary operations of well digging, exca- vating the ground for the Clhnk and ounda- tions of the buildings, &c., all which were dinary&long passage of the vessel with our pi e c. bird, The most serious delay and disap-; pointiuent was the want of suitable timber for ‘man, the errors of the insurgents will be ges us to hope, that, as the wor of God is a”_PoweI_,.u, ‘O overcome the "admons of and an interminable calendar of canonized priests and worthies. It is sad and unsatis- factory to be called upon thus to cast the our link, which I expected in a Timber» gradually corrected, and truth prove trium- executed by Contract. Specifications were also Country would have been all prepared and on phant over the land. On the title-page of given out, and estimates invited for the con- _ struction of the whole of the buildin a, as also “'9 “mi "Qd! f°’ “’° °“ "_‘Y ‘§"""'“l h°"° > every book of Scripu"-g is this nofificgfion- ' ii’ "i in Ausuu’ but it did not come‘ ‘ A new edition published in the 3d year I the Tank, and shortl afterwards the irectors contracted with the h essrs. Roper for the whole of the wooden buildings, and with Mr. Watts for the stone and brick work, which were com- pleted by both parties in a substantial tradesinan~like manner, to the satisfaction of the Directors, before the winter set in. Your Directors, had some dificulties to con- tend with in the construction of the t from the scarcit of timber suitable for the ur- so, and also om some heavy springs w ich werestruok,before gettingto the necessary depth ofexcavatiomwhich at one time threatened tobe insurmountable, but by the perseverance and energy (‘if your Engineer, these diliicultiee were overcome after considerable delay, and the Tanks completed in a satisfactory manner. The Gas apparatus and Machiner , which were contracted for by Messrs. Iiai law and Son, of Gla w, on] arrived in Charlottetown in the end 0 Septem r, and it was sometime in October, before the whole could he landed and removed to the premises, but not a day was lost afterwards in beginning to lay the main pipes in the streets which iiecessaril occupied a od deal of the Eu ineers time, before the oat set in, the ollowing Streets were an plied with Mains, commencing at Works a oiig Sidney to Prince Street 700 yards Down Prince Street and along Water I B 9- to I over. I hind with my Gas Holder which could not be ; built till the Tank was dow ' ‘ large sprin of water I had to contend with,‘ the short ' dilliculties which I neither oou d foresee nor the most im received and ad to be made of Boiler plate as best we could, namely, Knees. Tliiinbles, large ' pipes, _part of Hydraulic Main, and all the Re- tort doors, &c., t to sto got. gfhe above, along with the very rough and unfinished state of many parts of our appara- tus, which ought to have been com lcted in Glas w, had to be finished here an er many di vanta a, both as regards material, tools, and suitab e mechanics. terial has been expanded which will have to be replaced at a further expenditure of time and material, so soon as ' _arrive, of all which I have kept an account, as i The ‘present stoppage is one of those unforeseen aooi ' tion of all Gas Works, but which I trust a few e w hand till the best part of the season was‘ of the Tae_Ping dynasty’, Around the title the Imperialarms are emblazoned, and on the first page there is a large red stamp, four inches square, stating that the book is 1 given out by imperial authority. Reckoning the four books of Genesis, Exodus, Num- F:)°Ill:'tb.II, Independently of all this, some of: hers, and Matthew, the portions of Scripture - nut ,_.o,,,,,c,;,,,,, we", ,,e,,e,.§ issued by the insurgents already eiiceed in ' l’J;"§.El'.‘"f.J?i§f. .‘i.'I.°'.5:..'.’lI."'.'.‘i~'§l.'2’"i;-'t’.‘i" ; i e appears, the amount ofscriptural truth will be tenfold that of their own imaginations. The gentlemen who visited Nanking in the Cassini, state, that Tae-ping-wang has four hundred printers in his employ, and that he superintends their work himself. They also trite that last summer he held a literary examination, at which he allowed only those candidates to pass who were proficient in the books he had issued. And they further inform us, that new editions of the The want of this Timber kept me be- n. This with the . s and severe [on winter, were e latter of which was enough us from making Gas till Castings were Much time and ma- the proper Castings t must be charged to Messrs. Laidlaw and son. by Tae-ping-Wang. If this project be ents which occur less or more in the erec- carried through, we may anticipate that very Confucian Classics are coming out, altered ; and corrected to suit the views entertained {part of the present century. B ron, , worth, Moore, Jelfrey, Campbell, Shelley, lless, most of our readers are familiar. ;reviewer, it is recorded to his credit, that 1 Wordsworth, Shelley, Byron, and Burns, found balance between two false and faulty theologies; but we will appeal to any ear- nest Protestant who has lived in Turkey, whether he did not feel as much prompt and natural religious sympathy with the follower ofMahomet, whose simple faith is comprised in two forinu|as—-prayer to God and charity to man; who never fails night or morning, at business, or at meals, when the Muzzin sounds the hour for his de- votions; who never passes a mendicant without bestowing aims upon him ‘ for the love of God,’ however poor e ma himself—as with the so-called Christian of the Oriental Church, whose whole religion isu mass of lasts and superstitious cere- monies, who is enslaved by a priest almost as ignorant as himself, who knows little of his Saviour, and less even of his God." Di:.i'rii or Pitorassoit Wii.soiv.——Professor Wil- son, the celebrated Chi-isto her North of Black- wood’s Magazine, died on t e ‘ inst. He was born at Paisley, in Scotland, in 1788, where his father had acquired a fortune in a. manu- facturing business. Professor Wilson was one of that brilliant gatherin of British literary men whose writings have illustrated the early orde- Cole- , ' mb, and others, who started on their course, most of them about the same time with him, have disappeared before him. Rogers, Dc Quincy, Legh Hunt, still remain. As an author, his career has been a. brilliant one, the productions of his pen alwa s finding then- s of admiring readers. Ve nced merely refer to his “Noctes Ambrosianae," “Dies of the Let the New Testament be once constituted, Plague,” “ The Rod and the Gun,” " Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life.” “Recreations ofCliristoplier North.” &c., with which, doubt- As a treat 600 do. by‘ ‘'m P“ '0 "l8l“'- ‘'59? 1 "m in W“! Christ will supplant Confucius at no ,1 L, UP l-’°"1 5”” 05 Q“°°|1 Sm“ ‘Dd 3 P'°p"'°d "° "pply th° Tm?“ ‘M’ G”' “"“’° distant period; and as ti proficiency in the‘ H ge Cross Streets 918 do. 0"‘! '20 “mi ‘l“"‘ l.'“d ih" '°°l’ 3° °°°‘"'°d Christian Scriptures will he demanded as al From prince sue“ to powm] 5"”; when in full operation, the resu twould have em in _alone to men" fame while ‘he; ‘[0,, G,“-ton Sm,“ 493 do. been attended with tar more danger, lnbourand ‘PP 8 I _ Y W ‘i f I From ydney Street up Prince Street 03 1199- _ .d mm” c 339".“ are pmve ° ever l tog,“ gm,“ 295.10, _ re _et exceedingly,th_atIliave liadsoinan i olatrous allusion, we shall soon have mm PM W street“ P=°vin~W- 3;... ‘.'.'.'i.°“.:~°.'. :3.°:°.%°:“..:,'::".::::.°:.:'z..::':.:.*:. ="'P:"e' ""°.;"°de.°,e*"*'":,*=d "';°°eh the ing ' o. 0“ |_ 1| , popu ation, an mou iiigt emin ofChina. B 1 ,1! n1 1 f p 1 ‘n .C- :::=°m Gr-mm sum to S:-_.:°= 10° d°- i.°.=:.“::::;‘ :.'1.‘;’.':i‘;"‘.3..“.‘2’i‘§i;‘li§"i‘;;!:§‘;.'.§ '21:: "' ° " "" ‘ " rom Water Street up owns treat _ v }, 1,], k, d ,1 1, to Huwhinwnvl Corn" 232 do_ where scientific men of the first character, the a sc_ :0 .°° En we 13.39 . e. U" er "° pmm H;u,b°,.°u h Sueeg .10“ Kent most skilled mechanics, and practical Gas “PP”? °"5"’“ 3 0"‘ the '5""b“"°" 0f the Street West togQueon’s Streets 397 do. mBlI°l'| "9 3‘ h"1d- °?l>‘i°5,‘V°, ‘"'°_*‘l-‘°“t ‘O "‘“l‘lPlY3 and “_9lih‘3l' UP [m1,bo,.o,, h ~ “"0 31,-_|o_ I was fully prepared to generate Gas on 'I:ii-.-ping s printers, nor our own will be To Mr, Danielgflod 114 do 0|! Thursday I}. and after commenclng. found able to supply them fast enough to meet the gson’s house Amounting to 42 6 yards, and the Com ny a 0 some stoppage in the Gas llolder which pre- f vented her free action, and rendered it unsafe demand. in him their earliest appreciative critic and de- er. ilson was himself a poet ofmore “ If our Scriptures are to be the school». than ordinary ifliility. have still on hand upwards o pipes ready to be laid down as soon as the frost saves the soil. Along with the Apparatus. &c., from Glas- gow, our Engineer very judiciously imports two ll echanics, one of them an Engineer, the other a gas fitter. both of whom have been ke t busily employed since their arrival, the first in fitting up on the Premises, and the other, in supplying Houses with Service Pi s, Burners, &c., &., for the consumption of as, and he has com- leted upwards of Sixty Houses. Before quitting this part of the Report, the Directors cannot overlook, and must notice in terms of reprehension, the very unsatisfactory manner in which the Messrs. Laidlsw, have implemented their contract, for although bound by it to have the whole of the Goods contracted no of August, and when t ey did arrive, it was found ut for, ready for shipment by the first July. part of them were ut on board till the 1 th that many articles had not been ship . we‘;-e sent afterwards, some by way o Pictou an and con uonttly had to be finished which one 0 some months has bee in lighting): It will e Town. Directors. whet amount of damages here, ii ca the Shops, Stores and Dwelling Halifax and the latter have not yet reached ‘ 0 . their dostinktion, while many articles which last, Sir George Bonham brought back should have come in I finished WWO "Id! *0 with him eleven of the insurgents‘ tracts, fit into their places, were sent outin the ma h, ma h‘|fof mg Book of Genesis, “"5 the Cassini came away, onl two new tracts - - Scri re for the consideration oI'.|:.l|;‘:IbW. Nuullgn: “d an Go." to proceed further, and at 12 o'clock at night I was obliged to draw ofi' my retorts and make the necessary pre rations to put the holder to rights. The brca age in the upper part of the Tank which was ex osed all winter without puddle was the principal cause of the stoppage. ALKXANDKII i\lcAi'si.iNii. in, 1st, 1854. ' THE CHINESE REBELS AND THE BIBLE. The Rev. Dr. Medhiirst, in a letter from Shanghse, dated December 29th, I853, glues the following interesting facts in rela- tion to the Chinese insur ents. They strengthen our hops in rega to the ulti- mate results of this remarkable revolution. “ The most important intelligence is of a nature to interest the religious public at I home more than the mere rise and fall of emsires possibly bun do. On the occasion ftbe I-lei-mes'visit to Nanking, in sy When were brought down, but our volumes of consisting of Genesis, Exodus, I of Matthew. 1 ul ii better, have been obliged to adopt. ‘ The Delegates version of the New Te.<tn« books of China, however, every one must, Gunny or RUSSIA.-—Any individual in Rus- see how necessary it is that they should be} sia can become a priest. As a first step to- trnnslated in a chaste and idiomatic style, i Wafdfi learning his lmfilnefll. 1} Rulsitm is ap- That unfortunately, is not the case with the Q l‘°'“ted *“|bd91“‘°“~ ““ °“l°° “'l“"l‘ "9 ‘P331003 - ~ - , , yupull as several degrees beneath that of a productions which ‘he lnsurgilib’ for ‘mm! bundle or siicristan, whose duties lie fulfils. " lle lets his beard and his hair grow, for this is : the distingiiisliing sign of the priesthood. Ho sweeps out the church, lights the candles, takes care of the holy vessels, and cliaunts mass in a tone that is calculated to make the panes rattle in the windows, or even to break them, and frighten all the children. His advance- ment depends upon the volume of his voice; ment, and our Society's Version ofthe Old, corrects ina great measure that defect How grateful should we be that these im- porlant works are completed just in time, and how delighted that God has put into ihehenfls of Br.m.sh Chriitians to multiply the more formida le that is, the greater chance °°P'°‘ by ‘he m'"‘°n! It '3 most Probable he has of risin . Wlienacundidnte is declared lllfll "19 b¢“9|"l||f°l'm‘3d °m°“B ‘he P0P“'fl' t to be sufiicientfy instructed in his duties, he is tion of China have only to see the recent , consecrated, linving first been obliged to marry versions in order to prefer them; and when before lit? 98-11 001°bl'fll° ml“! 8'34 enter on his Tee-ping-wang perceives that the sense is i °m°°- H° ", ‘h°l']‘ 3°“ ‘° 9°“‘° V,'l,l“B° °"_°‘h°1'i identical, while the style is better than his : 3° ""3“:': :,“hi"s ‘:m':,:'r°."“p“""°‘ " h" 3”’ own, he will doubtless trniisler his imrni-. egg”, n E ' A Msruii: to thcple. Lfit us tflie‘i;I beCl;lusy_ in hibi':?::'l'g(.)N;:ou:u;?l'lg:N‘;;nedP?;mI;l:]9::n‘elf; °‘""'2""3 °“‘ ‘ ° '"'.°’ ° ° . "'"“" the United Association of Schooliiiosters of P“bl'° “ml the "“°l“"°“ °r lh° B'bl° S0‘ Great Britain, containing specimens ofeduca. cicty." tioual books, maps, d' grams, models, and ap- ratus, and intended toassist teachers in the n th“ pursuit of their profession. Several nea- tional societies, publishers, and authors of Erica! works, have given their aid to the un. In Demersra, every one is “Esq, wears shoes and stockings.