An Act to allocate funds to the construction of a new Market House in the Upper Town of Quebec, the standing wooden Market House posing risks to public heath and safety. The act outlines how Trustees will be appointed and their duties, including that they are to report on expenses. The act details how the money should be managed and repaid. Some directions for the construction of the new market are also outlined.
An Act to apply the sum of one thousand pounds through the districts of Quebec, Montrèal, Trois-Rivières, and Gaspé to defray the expenses necessary for diffusing the practice of vaccine inoculation. The processes by which physicians or surgeons will be appointed to administer vaccines, as well as procedural stipulations they are to abide by are outlined.
Under this Act, any person found baking and selling bread without a license is subject to certain penalties. Directions for the distribution of licenses are outlined, as well as stipulations relating to the production and sale of bread. This Act is to expire in 1817.
This act continues the 1813 militia legislation with amendments to the provisions regarding mustering times and places, command structures, discipline, supply, and fines.
This act prohibits any house or shop in Halifax from storing more than twenty-five pounds of gunpowder at once, charging the town firewards with enforcement of the act.
This act allows for the rector of an Anglican church in Saint Andrews' to sell glebe land to the government to construct a fortification for provincial security, and awards the church a new plot of land for a glebe.
An act to grant to Ladies of the Order of Charity of the City of Montreal a sum of three hundred and fifty-eight pounds to reimburse the money forwarded by them "for the relief of insane persons and foundlings."
An amendment to an act first passed in 1813, concerning the expansion of roads in the province. This amendment expands the original act to include roads outside the jurisdiction outside the original act.
An act to apply a further sum of money towards erecting a gaol and court hall in New-Carlisle and to continue an act from 1808 “An Act for erecting Common Gaols, with Court
Halls, in the Inferior District of Gaspé.”