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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1848-06-16, Page 141,11* -*Inmetarg'4.iser .341 si4 se:t * Oritu, • 01411.11P4 a.1We* APIA 104 Nrinew wet its elibuelletw, ea " Vr .1111Wie, euinripse arti:1 sn -ess me roes toe oleo" e a> •walii•-'. reeve : eaori Ms er ewe evili ..0•016 • allf4OL reetale them .410011, Li - , *1 • TBN sat •eitrow**,,,, " THE 'GREATEST POSeitiLit GOOD TO 711E GREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER." VOLT.ThrliWI 7". UODORICH, MIGRON-HISTRIOT, (C. W.) FRIDAt, JUNE 16, tbc§iston girt, 1. irsi Wiwi asp rust -wan, RRRRR varier BY CHARLES DOLSEN. ItARMIT-010•aito eciareame. Ta"" allb0411MEIthl. Semen. ereasis ETAS W liktheirat Sob "biotin, le she Emilie. mid French languages, wooled with seamen and tamale h. THE GRAVE OF THE INDIAN KING• 11.111." When the beater shell sit by the missed, and produce his food at nem, e some warrior meta here," he will say and my fame shall tin ts his praise. —Osumi. Neture seems to have made the fair west is we 01 bac sweetest and kindest moods. Beyond the Onondaga hail for • long dis- tance, these are au mountaies late* their black wad fogged sensate' to the clouds to break the lainsespe; so beetlieg 'life and shagge,1 precipices, frowning' lapse the wiled beholder; se dark and gloom' rli• vines "horrid with fern, mil flatmate with thorn." But the whole region., for beaked' of miles, presents a scene of plastid and en- uaterrupted beauty, varied wily by geetle bills, moderate declivities, deceit pimps, mei delightful valley*. Tb, satire face of the country ta moreover diversified by a success. son of clear and beautiful lakes,—flt reel. demo for tbe Nuielle,eeend trammed by rime which wend Bur way tranquilly to the earth, wit!, by see mighty booed, they Imp from the tittle lasil tole the embrace of the majestic Ontario, and are lost in the immeneity of its w RRRRR . But of all the lesser Wes with which this charming coati - try hay been reridered thus picturesque mid delightful, Skaneateles unites the trufrag• of the travelled wort/ as thri most beauti- ful. Its very male, to the language of the proud race who once reseed on forests, and bounded along its shores with the lofty tread of is 's nobility, or darted acres* its bright surface in the light canoe with the swiftness of an arrow, signifies the Latta or 8g/tiff . It i. true that beteg thus divested of the wildness and graodeur of mountain scenery, the stranger's atten- who had been induced to adhere to them dangers of exaggeration, or the repository of oblivion. Tb. district in which the incidents of oar drama occurred, is attested is the beset of what was formerly the territory of Free Nations of ladians—the bottoms of the Fignich, &ad this Warms of the early Eric tisk history. These tuitions consisted of the Mohawks, the °mince., the Onondao goes, the Crusts., and the Seuekas. They were a noble ram of the American *bongo itals, and hare been appropriately deargoim- wi as the Roe.....( this western Their War reessailledi IL iseskilleratod re- publish a thoogh they had nut advanced much beyond the first stage in the •••cence of goverament. Like the Romans, their conquests were pushed to a vast extent, •go tlrat by right inheritance, or of atm., their subject territory exteuded Irony the month of the Sorel on the St. Lawrence op the great okain of lakes to the Missisruppe them* to the junction of Oho with the Father of Rifling, south 10 the country of the Creeks son Chvokees, and from the ocean to the lakes. Like the Romans, they added to their own strength by is- corporating their vanquished foes into their own tribes. And of the prisoner* thee adopted, those who behaved well were treated u thougleof their own blood ; and iewise at the et/used-fire, and brave on the war-patle they were advanced to posts of honour. Like the Romans, liglOgeOlOg. their ambition was to extend their conquests, • - • .441 artier French wormers in Cassie, Internet - ed to detach the Five.Natione from the friseilthip of the Easkelt colouy, end nego. 'tate a separate peace. With this view, through the *gooey of the Jesuit', the count succeeded in persuading the Indians to call a grand couccil of then, chiefs at the old council -d'0 in (Mender, to which he despatched useseesgers cob his proposals. There we're eighty erechense present ; mod the Will yeomen by Boolekanaghtie. The French commissiopera laboured as- siduously to accompl,sh their purpose, and the conference continued I days.— But • messenger from Albany informed the chiefs that a separate peace would displease the English, and the proposals were there- upon promptly rejected. Shortly allot. ward, the count determined to avenge him.. self upon the Five Nations, for bovine' pre- ferred the preservation of their good faith mid honour to the peace which he had prof- fered. For this purpose he assembled .11 hie dispoirable troops. amounting to frier battalions, with the Iodises in his terve* and under 6,1 control, lied departed from Montreal on the bth of July, *6943. In &ti- dal -tee to small arms, they touk with them two light piecetrof cannon, two mortars, • supply of grenader; lee. After a weari- some march of twelve days, during .whieh the utmost circtimspeetion tees fleeetn32., to avoid ambeseader, the coast ?embed the foot of Lek. Cadarackui (new called Onta- rio), and crowed theoce in canoes to the even while their power and intluenes were estuary of the Othwege river, which flows en the decline. They cherished • high and from the northern extremity of the O000• downtrend sense of good faith and honour, 'dna, or Salt leke—the Onondaga river aseriveliag to their owe rude notions, and ear- flowing into the southern end, near the tied en a war for thirty years for a Binge great salt licks. The expedition cautious- infractioo of the rights of the caluinet.— ly ascended the Oshwego, and creased the Their prowess was great, and their naine a Salt leke, keeping stripier scouts on. the terror to other savage nation's long after flasks to prevent any surprise that might he the whites had planted themselves over a attempted by a crafty enemy. Thi d pre - wide space of the country. The grand cautionary measure was the more neces- cruised' of this powerful confederacy were sary, inasmuch as the Indian, against whom bald in the deep wad romantic valley of the they were marching, with their wonted Onondaga, where, as they believed, "there chivalry, hed given the French notice that had been, from the begginning, a contloual they were apprized of their hostile approach. fire kept burning." A tree had been simmered by one of the The Five Nations, moreover, being tlie scouts, on the trunk of which the savages Mends and allies of. the English, were cos- bad paiuted a representation of the French frequently much of tbe time involved in boa- army on its match ; and at the foot of the Whale with the French, then in possession tree two bundies of rushes had been deposi- °NW Canadair, lied also with the Indians tetl, serving at once as a•note of defiance, and giving the invader to understand that he would bo compelled to encounter as many warriors as there were rushes in the bundles. • These, being couoted, were found to number fourteen hundred and tharty-four: (TOURcOtirriXtrEn.1 tion is less powerfully awakened at the first view, than if it had been cast among the adamantine towers of a more rugged re- gion. But there is a motet loveliness is the ermatry by whelk It it eisnoseded--an air ot reptase--essietwitly calculated to please and captivate the heart. The lands de- scend on all sides in a gentle slope to the margin of the lake, forming, as it were, a epactous amphitheatre, having a fountain. of liquid silver sparkling in ite isomen. It• shores are alternately beautified by the henna of man with cultivated fields, adorned by the Jesuits—for "the Holy Order of Jo- . ins" had, even thus early, inanimate its prteetiy emieraries into every tribe. fa - deed, their fidelity to the English was some- times brought to the severest trials; .54 whoever traces their history will find their conduct to have been regulated by an el.: - rated and punctilious regard to honour, and marked by disinterestedness "above all Greek, all Roman fame." " When the hatchet -makers," said the eloquent Sad.- kessibite to Governor Fletcher, at Albany, le 1194, "firet arrived in this country, we return. This conveontm of oxygen into From the New l'urk Ilsibiager. carbonic acid is as secessary to the evolu- A BONG- OF FAITH. tion of the reed as the growth of the plant, and IA all that is memos' for germination ; but the plant requires something more, for, if light be excluded, veg•tetion proceeds imperfectly, and the plants does not then acquire its proper culuur, and other active properties which it ought to have. The chief organ. by which the consumption oi oxygen gas is effect, d, are the leaves, and its purpose, in great part •1 seems to be that of producing soave necessary change to the sap during Ile transmission throngh those organs, on its way from the vessels uf the wood to those uf the inner bark, whereby it nay be rendered fit for the pur- poses ut nutrition and growth. In its na- ture and object, therefore, as well as in the specific change which It produces in the air, this proems closely resembles the function of respirat MO 10 agiliglais, anti may thus with propriety ho deemed& ployitological process. The second, or purifjtog process, in which oxygen gas is evelved, differs in all re - trisects from that *bleb has just been de- reribeil. It is in a great measure indepen- dent of temperature at Waal it proceeds In teinpe•atures too low to rapport vegeta- tion, provided light be preaent, an agent sot required for gerininatien, nor essential to vegetable developeteent. The organa by which this recces acts on the aft are, Ile before, the leaves ; not, however, by chang- ing the qnalitics of the sap in the vessels of those organs, but by producing changes in the chrumule, or colourable matter, in their cells, to which impart• colour an oilier &cure propertses. In doing this, It does not convert the oxygen gas of the air in- to carbonic acid, but, by decomposing that acid gap, restored to this air the identical portion of oxygen of which the former pro- cess had deprived it. Tho former protean, carried on by the agency of the oxygen gas of tho air, was essential to living ac- tion, aid affected the well-being of the whole plant ; that exercised by the agency Of light is sot necessary to life, is local, nut general in its operatem, and is capable of proceeding in circumstances and under con- dition. Incompatible with living action.— By withdrawiug this my altogether, or de- priving it of oxygen gas, vegetation soon ceases through the whole plant ; but the CONSTITUTION OF NATURE. TUE eeirosennas. The constant preservatimi of atmospheric rarity is one of the grandest phenomena In by the 'frame verdure of the Meadow, or received thern kindly. When they were istere.,_.The purification Li effected by fringed with banks uf ft3were. 1Vh Iis. r‘, .but a small people, we entered into a league divers piocesses—.a, by whids, by the vast augment Lite ch•rin of variety, some of na- with them, to guard them from all enemies - _ extent of ocean over whose surface is an whatsoever. We were so fond of their inexhaustible reservoir of pure air, by elec- ture's own stately picturtugs are left, eon-, fisting of nnges of the primitive forest, here towering aloft in giant priae, and there overbearing the shore, and dipping their peones( branches is the clear soul element is which every object is redacted back with fresh and vivid disoncteesa. Combining so miry of the elements of beauty, few spots in tbe broad map of the accidental world can be designated having equal pretengions to admiratiow. Still, however, in the eye of untutored man, how much more beauti- ful arca the Skaneateles have been, before the eill0015 forests is which it was etubosern- ed fell as though struck by the wand of a magic:tam—wiles it lay amidst the awful stillimess and venerable grandeur which pre- vailed arbund—t14 dark &liege—the rich and solemn covering of the woods, giving it an air of indeeenhablii magnificeace and beeuty—in perfect keeping with the moody and ecnitemplatere bidets oi the mighty chieftains 1414. wilderness! The attractive sheat of water which we have thus briefly described, tit fourteen miles long, and from one to two mile. in breadth. The village, which take. Its name from the lake, is pleastly Chewed epee a little plain at taa northern extegesity, elevated het a few fest above the pebbly heath upon wheal tets cusped billows break so gently as scarce to givs mooed enough to berth an in- fant to repose. The view is chroming at all tomes; Mit, nothing eon be more delight- fol--ceore elquielteify beinstifel—thwo the pftleyeet ddli leanly vitiate, en a coot stmeleirke•thedece. wham the mime ef eight throws bumbler sweetie twee the sperkemg waters, lighting them up 1ik9.,a mirror of surpassing brighteses. Bolded the village the laud rims_ by _en easy sweet, into a hill atalallialbc4Wilbfa tripes. Us Wind oi addle an epee grove of mishits. forest tresseeothwieWleet of MIMI any es, itaa bust sedietied4o Mama flY Pr°Pcint4r— aollimplish earillww.n?arbe 10* Bios tat fol lowed • she ,inwit ward posh of • in 1d Mow., Vbsweiblestscaterl spei tbs preepect I than below. knells MISPEteoZtet yet uteripattipstiatt, dee a widii Jorpep. at fertile country, embracing seetioik broth wild and cultivated, fhera-bousee Mad eons - tip *.stne fieldedistemitierb wish rod asdadearei **Pau l4 — Hens tbe sudWe of this forestriesda lathe amilawfai usiffed with wild ud lanariut herbage, Ube e truid's gram'. sad ben Use bablenterial, has le'nos 111We" Itr torts who bare suceeded Witis; oboni C • fee **pie rif Ste Whifelts the bd lisrbleedtteiteltre of al' WS lfifinnel t 1011 flaa incenf*/,11 society, that we tled the great canoe which I Inc agency, but chistly by the solar rays. brought them, not with a rope made of bark, 1 It was long believed by seen of mimeo that' to a tree, but with a strong iron chain fas- plants possessed the power of exuding cozy- tened to a great mountain. Then the ; gen, and so formed a prime agent fur restor- great council at Onondaga planted a tree of I peace at Albany, whose top will reach the ing vitiated air to purity. Later investiga- tions, chiefly by French chemist', have son, and its branches spread far abroad, re • that it shall be seen • great way off; and 1 „sower, . , made it evident that plants have nu such we shall shelter ourselves under rt, and live i r unless when placed under the Who ! ence of the sun's rap, or, in other wools, at peace without molertation. The fire of love burns at this place, as well as at Onan- that solar light is the grand cleanser of the atmosphere, and without which both plant. daga ; and this house of peace must he kepi and ani hale languish and die. 1Vith re- gime. Let the covenant chain be kept spect to plants in particular, it is aseer- bright like silver, and held fast on all sides : let nut one poll his arm from it." Alas! tained, that while inhaling oxygen end ex - noble, generous chief! how fleetihg were piring carbonic acid, their looses possess tho yetnarkable property, In conjunction thy glowing visions; and thy brightest an - with the sun's light, of ni-transforming the ticipations of peace with the white tnan, carbonic into oxygen. At might, tithes the how soon were they overcast ! How soon, light of day has departed, the expired car; to the bitterrness of grief and disappoint- bonie acid may be detected in the neigh - went, west thou compelled to exclaim,— bourhood of plants, and hence one cause ut "Our areas are stiff mid tired of holding feat in ry to health by breathing night air; f[tret/leritststt•r. 4- joy. figofbillant total the lit1014 1St 0C „ce bet ear* vile. the chain, while others stt .till and smoke at their ease . The fat is melted from our fiesh, and fallen on our neighbours, who grow fat while!: grow lean. Pixy dour- nic alse tribe which numbered the illustrious ell nature melees in a re-creation of its ap- Saiithanaghtio, Tiobanoostia, Decanesora, propriaio nourieharent. and Gsranguls, whose simple and unstudied Tho alternate vitiation and purification is oloqueme, clothed in the rich and beautiful 1 er..!",,Ph"calli amcnbed a. tuki°v" by Mr. imagery furnished from the storehouse of r.',"°19 is an artncla on vagatatlan I° tita ostare, shone more brightly than the hlase Gardener's Magazine, vel. xv. :—" Under a a their ti000deeolm hot bow, swept from bright sunshine, the two processes by which Me hes ef Me settle ; ands few straggliag carbonic acid is alternately formed aad de - remnants of the other tribes who formed I composed, go on sirneltanemisly ; and (bier this celebrated confederacy, are all now len I nee/email operation, in as far at regards dell. few seigitty and terrible Osoussioir- 1 the condition of the am is that of counter - miss ging in 0„ 40.4.. *0 bestow a 0000.. acting each other. Heoce, though both ma be continually exercised in favourable " We know not the law consequeaces 01 .bat we call evil ; let us not speak of humeri efforts as bonen of resulir."—Lerois Nose. What, the' the martyr die iu Wise, The patriot in his blood. Whai, tho' unspoken be his name— Forgotten all his good. That flame shall fire the bigot's creed, And burn it to the dust, Thai blood from out the ground thaU plead Forever to the Jest. What, due the dungeon elms disseis. And tyrants hold the key ; Three walls of •ione shall pierce the hymn Fur truth and liberty. What, tho' men fall and all seems boat, And Power strides on its way, What, tho' die hope of right be crees'd And sepulchred to -day. The spirit bursts the portal stone, Tht martyrs nse again. The blood cries oat in judgment toe* " Where is thy brother, Cara 1" Theo let the body broken be, Still let the Wed be poor% 'Ti. thus they stein the victory, And triumph with the Lord. Providence, R. I., March, 1848. E. B. B. 5 '11% .%1411 SIX (E."'- t. •T anti or Tiair 111/11. NUMBER 26. rRoseit t PM*. The Tory Press are ;above* stir tip an excitrinent veins,. I went. The attain that they ..tt r the beads of the Annan' it in their rower, would Their cuckoo try of •' Prase humbug and doping,. he against the Adnitni eee e tion . Fur instarce, the do Postmaster, Mr. Complicit, 8111.coe, laid to their charge, ereas Deploy Postmaster General, Mr. Soggier. is the party %he dore, because the itomnibentee. fused to airy rrasurable orioles. The athetnistratten has a perfect right to deal with men who may have Cottle by their offices wrijuet/y—call it peosceiprima if you please ;—we would deem that adroinistra• tion unworthy of confidence, whirls would keep a man in office, %show private charac- ter would not bear the test of pubite opinion. The old Tory doctrine le to be repudiated, namely, that tt. Is with the public character of tt.e public iervanta that the people have to do, and not their private reputation.— Wo say, let the priraie conduct of men he the trait of their fitness for government tavours ; fur unlese a man bear a good name—unlea he bo' morel and upright in Id. private intercourse, how can he bo hoz.r11 as a public eerrarit 1 It is. imp/saris ble. This old Tory doctrine has been els moot the ruin of Canada. This is how ear public iffices bate gut filled by unprincipled! mec—many et whom, although et govern - silent pay— actually fired upon the honest, hard earned industry of there more humble neighbours. This Tory principle had rmido THE PRINTING PRESS. , much head way during the Metcalfe reign, that It became necessary to introdece a The rapid improvements which hive Bill into Parliament, to allow of the tarrying taken place in the printieg-press during the cif writs ol attachment apnea the salaries last twenty year., afford another instance iil bitch public idlicere as refused othererree of sating in the materials consumed, which to pay their debts. 'nue bill did not peasi bad been well ascertained by measurement atilt uugh %se believe there was, and le, notch and is interesting from its connexion with need for it. The ducking off of such Illea literatere• In 'he method of inking from situations of public trust—Cell it pr.. type, by large hemispheitcal balls stuffed seriplion if you please—is a healthy tier, and covered with leather, the printer atter cise to the administration, and will give rt taking a entail portion of ink from the ink• arength. It could not set ninon a e ork block, was continually rolling the balls in Inure calculated to rivet the'affection of the various directions against each other, in Canadian people in Lural present order that a thin layer of ink might be uni- administration of the government than that exclusion of light from any part of the plant formly "read over their surface. This he of purging and purifying situations of public again transferred to- the type by a kind of trust. The present suniterstratton are de - affects that part only ; and even the total deprives the , rolling action.- In mach a process, even Inc nothing in the dark. .111 their appoint - exclusion of that agent only menu+ aro regularly published In the Offi- to itt admitting considerable skill in the operator, plant of eertatu properttes necessary cal Gazette — their (Immo/sale are Riau perfection, but not essential to its life.— it could aot fatinto happen Viet large quart - The differena processes by which oxygen td Ink "aid get near the edges of publorbed. They court investigation inter the balls which not beim,- transferred to their conduct in thee acting. Del the hlefkalie administration act thus openly ?-•-• It dal not. Thu Regmtrarship of the County of Rernsew in this District omelet that administration. of affair, war taken from Andrew Dickson, Esq., and -conferred upon an..thur person', upon the plea we sup-, ecil to Cu% ern. mild eerie awn, had a casaba. ties" 14 all a ke charges Ionia tonnda- sal of the but when the morning sun again bursts up- on the sconce, a great, chemical proceed° commences in the atmoapberd,—the earbo- lob, while Sy.f, Eye, too moo of iis decomposed, oxygen is evolved, and mg tribute to bonenrable and wellorimerved maim upon an illustrious race, whom merits bare never been properly appreciated— whose noble characteristics have not been welt understood, and Whom proud charm - gar aft history has moiled to esturneiate,.... wet may have Mgreirsed too far, and will new return to our oubmot--" the Grave of tie Indies King." 714 frusent hostilities in which the PIM Notions were involved with the Cana - dam French and Indians, in committee/tee .1 lUelr alliance with tier En loth, have al- ready been nientioned, A meet were the eenewie sae sfAsIbligory reassacmi, co bah nee described (centimes per authority), circumstances, ttte efillete of neither on tbe atmosphere can be ascertained by ordtaary.. MOSS* ; and, consequently, though in the experiments of Simmers wrath cosintom air, the production and decomposition of carbonic! nerd by plants is sunshine meet have been continually goieg on, yet 10 ell the aeslyses which he toads, the air was feeeffunciaseged either in purity or volume; in other words, the processes of formation and deeonapositioo of this acid gas exactly counterbalanced each other. Of the two processes which have been gas is alternately consumed and evolved, t he type, became heard and useless, and was during the vegetation of plants In sun- shine, are so manifest, both in their nature taken uff in the form of a thick biack cruet. Another inconvenience also strose,—the and effects, as to satisfy the ascription of a name to the latter process distinct from that quantity of ink spread on the block not be- teg regulated by measure, anti the number given to tho former. It nitght. perhipe, be and direction of the transits 01 140 inking - denominated the chemical process, in con- tradistinction to that named physiological. balls over esch other depending un the _will pose of _his being Sheriff of ib e Duitoct.— , It would contribute much, wg think, to of the operator, and being consequently 1 - plea, -we should have been silent on this sub 11 we had conaidered them sincere in their izeja_ gular, it was taipossiblo to . place on the simplify our inquiries concerning ve jeet, fr 'we are opposed 10 sten holding a lion, to bear in mind these distinctions : 'to 'IYPe a "If. ".1*Yer of ink. of time d b . , , lase introduct on rif r) lindrical rollers vf an quant t - On the.auttistion of District Land Agent be - consider the., one prOcers as accomplished pturtility of "aces. But what is the fact.. ty, exactly sufficient fur the iloprevstun.— Y I, y , . elastic substance, formed by the mixture o the life and -growth of the plant ; the other wasubordinate, depending on the agency of I glue and treacle, supersedes' the inkieg-balle light, mid though necessary to the perloc- 'I'd produced. comoderable saving is the consumption of ink : but tho most perfect nun of vegetation, yet nut essential to its , I economy was only to be produced . by me - immediate effects and remoter consequem; chanielis. When printingItrreseer, moved eels, without clashing with the ot:ier : and by the power of steam, were introduces', the apparent:y discordant and even contra - the action of these rollers was found to be dictory phenotnena which on a first view they seem to exhibit, may be reconciled, well, adapted to their performance ; and li reservoir of tnk was formed, Isom which a and comet er , notes Y roller regularly abstracted a mein quantity . fact, as conspiring together to form one harmonious and perfect whole." at an impressioa. From three ti; five other have brou,oht hen more of lioness, than pre• rollers spread this portion uniformly over a jig'', But will any man tell us that this was --. ------ .lab, (by most indenious contrivances vari- fair,—was this distrIbuting fierly and itn- NO UNDERGROUND ROAD TO HEAVEN. ed in almost each. lund of pross,l and anoth- _:.- i partied, the patronage or the Crown 1.— er travelling roller, having fed Odell' on the The Registrarship Wad taken from Mr. commit vacant—who was it that was ape pointed by the men as memorable fps MAW consistency as their purity 1 Wee • per- son Cho held no tither office No ouch, thing. We believe, if we mistake not, Mr. Leslie at the tune he was appointed to Oils lucrative situation, was in receipt, of a Iled, pay from the Heine Government as a Mile - tar, man --he bad long en,joyed the situa- tion of District Inspector of Licenses, and also held other offices which, however, may 'YU religion of Christ is a visible fisheries. slab, passed and re-passod. over the type His church a visible church ; its members just before it gave tne impression to the risibin mernlaers. This visibility' is an Paper. eneortant feature of Cbristiarnpiety : while In order to rh'ew that this plan of inking its seal is in tho heart, the vital and moving power there, there must be a profession, a manifestation. This grows not out of any authority or command, but from the very nature of the pnncipbe. Itis here, and you cannot hide it ; it goes forth and. will go forth. It Is light, end you connot make It dark : you may,- indeed, light your candle and put it tinder a bushel ; but if you put it on a candlestick, it will give light to all who are 'tithe house. Such is its nature— the rays will flow from the centre, and at is folly to expect anything else. It follows, that if a person is a Chaistian. the world will find it out ; if he have, true faith in his heart, this faith will cause him to do some- thing by which ho will be exposed and known. There is, then, no such thing es having Christ's religion to ourselves—no goinf masked to heaven -00 night passage aides, all nailed. be instaneed in tbe battle wieh nee eitheressied al in its paters between the Five Nations and tho Hurons, shone." P"ompq":nolt::,: 41.119ce fr°I13 " "4" may be readily cstin- . weer quo/we—the destruetiee of Ochstinei tido. aid elsoititer of Montreal. TOO ham, wirdwidirer, We they irseooreged and unshed into beesilities by tbe Iteglisk arid is unwed IOWA IWO forefoot adeipiate sec. essar gip esgolos, alie year 119°, Crust Freebie/it, of thei meet laciest and 44. , perhaps, as tbe nteef,e,teel aka whoa tbat tempera twit balcla a eft 44.110,460.2 :ben, drrEctiveb1chet: very vareimaitsin regtiordr gut:abed; marther do they necessarily inter- feres wham actually working together.— The first or deteriorating proceas, in which oxygen gas le concerned, rew ott at all them and ail etnewee agree wItes•ore- tatten settee, llt require, alwari a suita- ble temperate., la which te display itself ; 1110011 lees onvittitily lite , again to be te- n, iball new orbit i a bite us .i.irots a evis los ;,,, i.. ,,,, el!, . r- ;How, ,. vv..., .sli glii. • es iron I ! relle-WIN alibi* ilia rdast 4 ~meg! s . nassisms..seem3 em v slasilwo 4 aneseersew..• . . ,., ,,• l'"" "' * SIM* W. MO slarnallailaul 'OW MIR OdBis snenineivis ail bwf mei bei... • eft. 1agint imams swam error dee a re.. r, . puts the proper quantity uf ink upon the type, we must prove first,—that the quanti- ty' to not too little : thin would hese beon discovered kern the complainia of the public and the booksellers : and. secondly,—that 11 1. not too great. This latter point was satisfactorily established by an experiment. A few hours after one siiiesssf a sheet nt paper has been printed upon, the ink is suffi- ciently dry to allow is to receive the impres- sion upon the other : and am considerable pressure is made use of, the tyinpan on which the side first pruited 14 laid, 14 guar- ded rosin soiling it by a sheet of paper call- ed the sel-of sheet. This paper ?MUM', in succession, every sheet of the work to be printed, acquiring from them more or less of the ink, according to their dryness or the quantity upon them. 11 was neces- sary in the former process, after about one there—ens teaseled, underground road to hundred impressions, to change this pi tIff that place. We are aware that there are shca, which then became tau much soiled those, who love to talk about religion as for further use. In the now Method of something altogether between their own printing by machinery. no Inch sheet is used souls and God. They tell us that they do but a blanket is eirnployed as its substitute gOI put it on their foreheads, nor write this does not require changing *Dove once it en their torments. And we ask in live thousand linpressions, 11111.41110411* villa does approve of ostentation in such have occure I of its remaining sufficiently matte/al But we say if it be so, always clean for twenty thousanii. Dere, then, is annoyer, where a hidden thing, it a. a dead a proof that the quantity of lillnerlluotis ink thing. Hype keep it (bus a secret, it is put upon the paper in maelene-priniing is Deese** you aro ashamed of it - ashamed to so small ,that, multiplred by five threeintid have it known. We Infer this both from and tome matancen evon by y the palate of the principle, and from the sand it is only priffictent to render useless a single meee ef eloaa cloth. The fellowing were tho results of tan Melanie experiment upon tho effect of '; he tesediterof the great Authm. Ile that eels- feestelli ese beton men, him will 1 con - T Dickson properly enough, provided Wats disinterestedly dune, bet why give the Dis- trict Agency w pewits already cunipe• tentlyjerovided for We hare made free with Mr. 1.411111e's name in tnese remark's.— we mean no offdeee by so doing ; but claim the prisilege 5*a /man:that. We would. • equally thsappruve of Sheriff lhaktion iwal41.- ung the Registrarship of Renfrew, as we do 1.1r. Le.lie's appointmentor to Army of Crown !Ands In this Knot. We du do lrtii princtie. The Tory Press has been so long accustomed to Government spoils, that it Id actually becoming rabid In 11 e prospect of being pruseribesi from any fur- ther plunder 01 114publle muney.-seffate Aural Courier. . PATRONAGE. Tho conductors of the appeeitioa Press, aa well as many of tho Tory office•huiders, and idlii:u•seekers, are evidently in a great panic about their bread and butter; every diAtiliSSal from °nice by the Government, Meet,' With their disapprobation, no 'natter how the euCturthent fur the situation ; and the litilo euppuri given to the liberal Press, in a few ilastanCes. forms the gramma for aa much remark, and abuse, se though the gaiety uf the Province e era endangered by it. From all this opposition to tho Ad- ministration, it is ea tile .1 that the very su- perior loyalty of these croaker. connn ets i Lha fat °dices they hold, or wish to hold, and in Government patronage. They can me nothing dorm eniment except what rallies or some mom.), Ind r. Ant fess. Owe lathe test :11 you have it ian men first to cry out nbel and aakims when • will sheer it ; if you hare It not, you have proems' just dereribed, 'mole at ono Of ihu, it Milts their piirpusr. Hot tt is not s Ins it Mat. If thero is nntbing seen, there la largest priding e414'ilishment• inthr Melte- tle amusing 10 foe the course tsken by eoure setting intide—ffilo Rrpoaf.0 ..fpril. row—Two hundred mama of paper were violent, sae abusive, party eoniliteiors prietort n* the old method of triton with the PrI,4; much re ihdt they could. " A 144 os New Haw, pea birth r, drys baft• being employed ; two hundred realms never diacover anything loyal, honest, ur leo A. ow too. of the • •81144 plip4111f, Sad fur the sante book, wise, in ft Reformer ; •re mysteriously , 1•11016a GM go .. beg lialsiginsiar is Ibis wag. Mai/ printed off in the presses pre..c laic li changed. The election of a Reform Puha. beetling vroc44. eswiniiisii..,; mired their own type. 7'hr eOPPPIOiptIPPI .r1 monk •nd ill* appettitteent 01 • Reform Ad. , fotod., his Offat 14 the condemner' ink by the Realer was le Mot by Hie halls! aunt ttttt have hat OM seemeerly mire - the Gov, office, are this .1* re s. het Trieeespli, en the grousd that she Jae four II ninese rather lees than free. *Mune eireel, of changing them iereek.na lee of ills meta, r fr. ' I:1e -l' 1 -id horMites •— , 404 Wu it min rellw-t*YeS