Huron Signal, 1848-11-03, Page 1TSN $UILLINGS
lee AAAA.sa.
VOLUME I.
1,600,000 ACRES OF LAND
FOR SALE IN
CANADA WEST.
THE CANADA COMPANY lash for
disposal, about 1,600,000 ACRES OF
LAND diepereed throughout most of the
Towaetups in Upper Canada—.early 600,-
000 Aero are situated in the Home Tract,
well known as one of the meet fertile parts
of the Previeee—et km trebled its popule-
110e ria Ave yeas*, sed sow cesium up-
wards of $0,000 iababitaets.
Tho LANDS ere offered by way of
L E A B E, for Tse Years, er Jnr
.gale, CASH D OW N—the plan e!
e.eutk art, .ad Ike balance in Insal-
mewls being deet envoy MIA.
The Resta payable tat February each
year, are about tb. Interest at Six Per
C..t.opo. lbs prime( the Lied. time most
of this Lot.. mole. LEASED, NO MONEY
18 REQUIRED DOWN—whilst upon the
otbers, according to locality, one, two, or
Huse years Rest, must be paid in Menace,
—bet these permeate will free the Settler
m
frofurther cells until gad, bid or 49 year
al hes Isom of Lome..
Tb. right to PURCHASE the FREE-
HOLD Julio( the tuts, is **cured to the
Leases at a flied mei named i. !,ease, sad
e:*apallowar.r• fit :,.1ae�ord�n; to aatiei-
'itedltlsy...ate
- Lists of Lade, and say further informa-
tion ae be obtafwd ^(by application; if by
lease w
lepaielamedl at the Cosray'e Omuta,
Teresa* and Gartered ; of R. BIaeeALL,
Feq., Agiyfi, Colberee D strict ; Dr.
Ahem,Gael* or J. C. W. DAL., Esq.,
8lrWorel, Hume District.
Goiricb, Marsh 17, 1848. 7
STRACIIAN,& LIZ ARS,
t3ARWSTERS std Anomie. at Law,
Solicitors is Cbamery, ad Bulirupt-
C7, Notary Public and Coev.yancer., Gode-
ricb and Stratford, Huron Dual -icy C. W.
loss STaAC.AI, Godericb.
Deem. Hors Lsxaas, Stratford.
Oodencb, April 90, 1148. 6m 1
NOTICE.
APPLICATIUN will be mediae lbs awes
Session of the Proviecnl Legislature,
for leave to bring to a Bill to constitute and
form the following Townships and Gore,
and Block of Land, viz :—North Eaatterp.,
South Easthope, Downie and (lore,—P t;ee,
Blaeebard, Fullerton, Logan and Itibbert,—
Wellestay, Morino: too and hi my borough,
and Wester% half of Wilmot, and the Block
of lEgd behind Logan,—into • new Dfs-
tri%t. AL}sX. MITCHELL,
• e.• -,l•' &fey of Committee.
.lei WS. s • JpmR
THE Bekscriber oilers for ale Lot No.
11 one is the seveetb Conetnaion of the
Towsebip of Colborne, West Division.
?bare is on the premisee a small Log Baru,
with IS scree under rood eullivalien, and
well fenced. The Laud ie a etcetleet
quality, and within 6 mike of the Towe d
tiodencb, containing 100 acre..
TERMS of Sale will be made known by
applying to William Robertson, Esq., Can-
ada Company's Office, Godericb, or to the
.sbaonler.
DAVID SMITH.
Godericb, Marsh 1st, 1848. elf
TO THOSE iT MAY CONCERN.
MR. OLIVER, having left the whole of
Ms unsettled secoeltts with the Clerk
of the 1st Division Court, Goderich, advises
a/Maim imbabted to bias to see that gen-
Home
en-
H m e before the 90th of .ext month.—
A•y.alternation required, will be Om at
tb. oleo *sly, where a person will be al-
wa a t• attendance.
tk�, Jane 19, 11144.
JOHN J. le. LiNTON,-
TART PUBLIC,
e a.+sar.. _ _ • dtrrilC!' ` Cineet1's Bench,
wAND Ci lIfTEUSCER,
STRATFORD.
ti
ria. itw{. •
..•nes«NOTIC E.
of We sews ef Gedetieh will
.L. lei essli,e�m.�e�.t fits as . bet to tet.po-
tete the said
Qeiri�ii, i 11y >wlt. IM9. 99tf
M[, t
AAA ILTION,
..O ii a • 111-0 X,
- CI ottesatintro
er-•Sian;.
111 ]k TR+�� Ili ,
rTU AND aL'1►z1ER,
WWI 114110611, In. 4e.
GODBR1CH.
D.
EAPRIBTER
AT$ON,
D ATTORNEY AT LAW,
soLstrrT.a rm t mill*.►, poli eisrrcy, kc.
OFF1G IA THE MAaxtLr ,QUARE,
GODZILIC M.
74•.1848. ... a.
"a 1718 GRRATi8T poSBHiLi HOOP W THE uRIMLTiBT POSSIBLE NUMBER.
,y.
GODPRIOH, HURON DISTRICT, 1C, W.) FIRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, I84b..
0 t t t V. -
BURNS:
�1 m sset, beeaks frena weer Alloway Kirk, is
-Ayrtshue, u the SWUM et 189.
Wild Ree. ef Allows? tjee thank.:
Them 'tn Wet mit of minium. aeon
Wises int we deet epee " the bask.
Lad Caen re' bossy Does."
Like thio., beneath the then -tree's best,
My seamy hoer was glad and brief,
We're crowd the *tater sea, and thou
Art wither'd—dower mad leaf.
reed will .a thy death -Doom be mine—
The deem of all things wrought of elay—
rend wither'd ray life's leaf like thine,
Wild rose of Alloway
Nouse bis memory, for whose sake
My bosom bore teed far and Zoog,
Hie—who a bumbler Bower weld make
Immortal as blames.
The memory of Boras—a niote
Thar calls, when b:imm'd her festal cep,
A astiowe glory, sad her Shue,
In silent redness sp.
A seem' •gfery—b. Me nasi
.ergot -..he's e..enined his need
Lad it is joy to .peak the beet
_Tommy ethanol's hied.
Po. stood beside the eottege bed
Where the Bard-peesent first drew breath ;
A stew-thateh•d reef above bis head,
A mean -wrought emelt beneath.
Aad I Lave stood beside the pile.
His inoaumeot—that telis is Hoven
The homage of earth's proudest isle
To that Bard -peasant given :
Bid thy thoughts hover o'er that spot,
Boy-Miastrel, in thy dreaming hoar
And know, howtver low his lot,
A Poet's pride and power.
The pride that lifted Baran from earth,
The power that gave • child dams
A..ead.oey o'er rank and birth,
The rich, w Maw, tbe etr.eg ;
And Ifdrsp .dseey weigh down
epiei.'s flattering pinions thea. -
Deapai:-thr name is w.iu.. ea
The me of coranoa ma..
Thew have ben loftier themee than his,
And longer scrolls, and louder lyre',
And lays tit up with d'oe.y's
P. and bolder fires :
Yais lithe some Was knew sot deaa
P1leeld r omit than Bona an then ;
11____._Mwe wan a grosser wreath
120tt•is. Mich Mod. bit hair.
M htieim Mow of the heart,
Y. *Melt the a•ewerisg heart would speak,
Thought, word, that bide Me warm tear start,
Or the .mile light the cheek ;
•
And his that music, to whose tow
The commas poke Oman keep. time,
la sot or ea.tls's mirth or mean,
In cold or Bossy clime.
Aad who hath beard bis wog. nor knelt
Before it' spall with willing ban,
And liste,'d, and believed, sad felt
The Poet'. mastery.
O'.r the mind's wee, is calm rid eters,
O'er the beer is s.s.bioe tied its showed,
O'er Pussies's mowers, bright sod warm,
O'er Remotes duh, void hears ;
Os fields when bnve.men "die or do,"
In halls where nage the banquet's mirth,
Where moaners weep, where lovers woo,
From throne to cottage hearth ;
What sweet tears dim the eyes unshed.
What wild vow. falter on the wages,
When "Beats wba hoe wi' Wallace bled,"
Or •• Mid Lang Elyse" is saes
Pen hopes, that lift the eon: shove,
Comb with his Cetus's bytes of praise,
Aad dreams of youth, and tnth, sad love,
With " Logan's" beaks sad beam.
AM whoa he breathe* his .torte. -day
Of Alimonies wwb-lmsttod wail,
All passiew in our frame of clay
Comm :hrstidtig at bit mall.
fagitmtios'. world Oak,
Aad our own world, 'termer sal glee,
Wit, pathos, poetry. an then,
Aad death's oubli mi t y.
Aad B.,..•. -though brief the is.. he rue,
Thesis. ►.nd dank die path ho tad-+
Loud--died--ie farm and arils kt...
Tho toys ef his God.
Th eegk ease, sad train, sd west. and w.,
With weand. that .ay death assig leak
Truer -the pew demo Ma. knew,
Tito wood ales. W feel,
He kept be hesesty sad truth,
171. rdep.d.st rouges led pee.
W moved, 1s rea.hosd and is ywt►,
Nee of his fellow -tee.
Same mw, deep beim. me.i.es se mfg,
A bass of jm.aa a.d .l k..vq
A lima of doe • seem ef welds.
Of ~sod, sad ef Anse
A kind, true heart, a sphit high,
That meld eat tear ..d would mot bow,
Were watts. r his mealy eye,
Aad os his saulp Mow.
Praise to the bard : bis welts .r drives,
Like flower -arils by the far winds sews.
When's:, beseech the sly d Mares,
lb. Neff fame have down.
Praise le ab .te. ! a motion mood
Beside his coffin with w.t e,es,
Har breve, bar bee.trtal, ..d send,
As when • loved o•e dies.
And still, as ea his emend day, e
Meo ,toad his cold earth -comb .rus.d.
With the mate homage that w. pay
To consecrated ground.
Aad consecrated ground it is,
The last, the balluw'd home ef os.
Who lithe epos all memories,
Though with the buried gene.
8.eh parr u W un pilgrim-ahrioes,
Shrines to .o code es creed named --
The Delphics vales, sod Pandas,
The Meccas of the meed.
Sages, with Wisdom's garland wreathed,
Crown'd king", and mitred piesis .f power,
AM warriors wok their bright swords sheathed,
The rte ehtiest of the hour ;
Lid lowlier sasses, whose humble how•
1,a lit by Fermate" dimmer sur,
Are there—err wave .ed mountain e.m..
From eoaatriu neer and for ;
Pilgrims, whose waadsriag feet have primed
The Switzer's snow. the Arab's sand,
Or trod Me piled leaves of the Wept,
My owa gree. forest -lad.
All ask the cottage of hie birth,
Gate:ore the seems he loved and song.
Aad gather i,eiinga sot of mirth
lea fields sad .ir:sma : mosg•
They Hager by the Dona. ow reef,
Asdpastoral Nttb, rid wooded Ayr,
And round thy sepulchre., Dane -nes
The Poet's tomb is theme
Bot what to them the sculptor's art, •
His Macre columns, wreaths, sad taus?
Wear toy sot graves ea the heart
The name. of Robert Barest
Fra -Gazes Haaige ..
CLIMATE.
Climate is the condition of the amwphere
TWELVE AND SIX PENCE
•T TRH ten u► THK ',Hatt.
NU3113HR 40.
went of vegetation it coded late. Till the
rummer solstice, this progress is very is-
coogd.•rablc, but It becomes very rapid i°
the mt.uths rat lone, July, and August: tbie
may be accouoied fur to • great armature
tram the length of time 9.1 the sun in
Mime regions continues shove the bunao..
Near Der. ell, seed -wee commeac.. abou,
the middle of ►larch, and frequently later.
basest mance aces about the let of Sep
tember. Buts though from some counter-
acting cawea the barroom may be m early
io the uurih as ID the "nth of iecoaland,
yet it appears au unquestionable fact, that
mho aminate sad tegetab:ea which thrive
1% the southern part of the island diminish
V size, of they pas. toward.' its northern
district*. As the productions of the tropes
tail when attempted in the bigot- latitudes
of the temperate zone, •u those even of the
south uf Britain can scldum be brought to
perfectiuo to the earth tit Scotland. And
yet, such is the bounty of nature, tbat every
climate pessosee* its own peculiar prudue-
Lein, which arrive there at their greatest
perfectren. The- satire piece of Norway,
and even of Inverness-shire, rival those of
the most favoured regions. ''be native
cattle of the Hybridise, though not equal in
size, aro equal in besaty of foray and to
' flavour of flesh, to any in Europe. The
lessee which these circumstance. suggest
to the agriculturist is obvious; it u Las --
that exotics, whether -of the awtnal or vege-
table kingdom, should be introduced with
eorupulou. caution. The antmab may, i. -
deed, be sometimes improved by crossing,
sad a breed, in some measure sew, may be
thus naturalised; but to every experiment
of this 11.d, wbetber in animals or vegeta-
bles, oaten should be consulted."
The lettere of the climate is influenced
by several circumstances connected with
temperature. That climate is generally
the Crest for agricultural operations which'
permits fetid labour for the greatest num-
ber et days throughout the year, and which
beteg* forward an amount of produce wttb
the greatest degree of certataty. 'The
worst fault that • climate can have is to be
precarious, as, for instance, that of some
countries where whole crops are occasion-
ally destroyed fur watt of run, or injured
by blight.. The climate most desirable is
Met called "seasonable weatber"—a dry
oceLl-tine, spinet showers, summer and
esthete heats, and winter frosts. In some
eljnar.."_'' as that above mentioned in the
north of Seat -"d, intense beat for a abort
period of the year in sus. 0-+easuntor
sates the wait& of a modern: ".- t fpeor •
sea -shore. In regard to winds: the mesa- LIT11)_]1 %Pine PR I1'T1NO.
teem of the westerly wande is allowed to —
be the eau** of the great quastity of rain This is a nirole of erodeCing ccpics in
en the west coast, while the uorlh r41t'0171..1 ulthetted aurrrber.10 The anginal
winds are the dreeet and coldest. '1'tere
north and east winder aro found to be en-
mendty and utgerual lo unmet and vi geto-
ut. tile. 'rimy generally prevail in 1 areb
✓ od Apny mei riot u.frequently exteird tote
May, and ester dune. The !reg.., wry of
uortb-eeet wtadr during these aepr.tL., tr
the gleam defect tit the climate of Frc tlond,
and le kit, indeed, severely over all Creat
Britain.
wlrcI, iuppl:cr the copied is a draw,ing wade
0. a Stene of a alightly porous nature; the
irk ertipluyed fur tracing it is made of such
growl materials that when weter is poured
neer the Mose it shall rut act the lines uf
the drawing. ken • a ro'Ier covered ugh
prir.t.ng-ink, wh h is of en:oily nater-, it
peeved over the .tone preciously wette,!,
the wafer prevents this irk from adhering
to theur.covcrcJ portio.••; whilst mho ink
urs that
Home climates are accounted ratey acd thud i�iritinthe u i k ni adhenEis of s lob k�t in Lltba
b • r fba uaaut u( rue wLich p g
t '
titer dry. quantity .tate if a sheet of paper kir placed Upon -the
fall. iu guy given , Jere t depends
un t s 110ne, and 11"o p*r.Ctl under a prep, the
proximity w the sine, and whether it be uf a priatrag-ink will be transferred to the pa.
mouWoous character. Hills attract per, leaving tLe ink used la the dracrgtt
invent show- •
still adherii g to the siune.
clouds, and thus bring down f
ere, winch Wood ►u the adjtcent level Thera Is one application of li!hngraphie
cuuutry. Oa this account much more rain
printing which docs not appear to beet re -
fall' to Britain than on the coaineot gene- caved .t tficunt attention, end perhaps fur -
rally, and wore rout (Gila iu the north-west cher rxperuu• hrr are fie, oma. ry to bring it
than to the south -cart part of the island.— to perfection. It is mho repenting of wuikr
ie the south of }:nglasd there fall elan*which have jest armed loon tither coun-
aboui 24 inches; is the midland counties,tries. A few years ago one Of the Parranewspapers war reprinted at Breast's'as
soon as it arnved by inranr of lithography.
Whilst the Ink is yet fresh, this may coaly
be accomplished: it is only r.cccsrary to
place one ropy of the newspaper on a litho-
graphic stone; and by means ofgreat pres-
sure applied to it in a rolling prose, a ro1B-
cient quantity of the printing -ink will be
transferred to the stone. By simper mean.,
the other side uf the newspaper may bo
copied on another stone, and these stones
will then furnktt Impressions to the usual
way. If 1•ri: ting from stone could be re-
duced to the same price per thousand as
that from moveable type., this process
might be adopted with great advantage for
the supply of works fur the use of distant
countries porse•sing tho same language.—
For • single copy might be printed off with
transfer ink, and thus an English work, for
example, might he puhliehcd in America
from stone, whilst the Original, printed from
moveable types, made its appearance on the
some day in England.
It ms much to bo wished that 'inch a
method were applicable to the reprinting of
fac-eimtles of old and scarce books. This,
however, would require the sacrifice of two
copier, ammo a leaf must bo destroyed for
how grain crops will ripen to peculiarly wet each page. Such a method of reprudu ciog
climate',. provided theta hu been a miry ttupresswn of an old work, to pecu-.
seed -sowing tune, and the soil be open to !tarty applicable to mathematical tablet!, tho
allow the superabundant moisture to escape setting up of which in type is always ex -
longer period; but the endurance of a moil- t fifer'! mho over -deluged roots. This, in pensive and liable to errur; but how long
A'iagre�.. twerefta•e w sat.'Jse soot pri•cisiee.E tads- will eastfaus to be transferable to
Me to vegetation than a higrtemperature
for •comparatively brief space of cline. � modern a N �itakapdry, A`pos_thvely bad or atone, trim paper on wMctr it err oownooeraele:, . may bei almost entirely printed, roust be deteruuued by experiment.
It is the greater continuance of heat os b dated b verdin -; .'f the free outlet for The deetrucIIon of the greasy or oily por-
16; is Laucaabtre, 80 on mho low grounds,
40 and upwards in the higher parte.—
At ELrihurgb about 37 or 28 fall; in the
west of Scotland and iu Ireland, nearly duu-
ele tied quantity.
We thus pence. the difference beteizt
a Scotch and English climate as respect,*
Its moisture. England beteg much les.
mouotaisoua than Scotland, its lemons are
more uniform, sed it is therefore touch lads
itabie to safer from the effects of ungcntal
summers than ScuUand ia, breeder .kill
and industry are thereture necessary to cul-
tivate by fu the greater proportion of the
latter Country to advantage. In cold sea-
son., wet demote always suffer the most,
while uo the contrary, dry tracts of land In
a gond climate seldom suffer from backward
entente! seasons. Some quarters on the
east of Britain are most favourably situated
for cultivation. Its Norfolk and SufRilk,
there are scarcely any seasons too Wet:
while in Scotland, a warm dry year is allow-
ed generally to ensure a good crop, but uni-
formly produce* an indifferent crop in the
dry corn districts of England.
Although a climate possessing a due pro-
portion of moisture with sunshine is that
best adapted for vegetation( it is surprising
as respects temperature, moisture, and the east coast ef Scotland, that renders t0 ° s ' 7 p e draining and tion of the wk In the character of old books
the failed ram by means u• ,
other y,ieluter affecting animal and vegeta- iso superor to the west coast as a corn ower opmrauuoa. Much, In�cc-', it's* be seems to prercet an greatest impediment;
Dle life. No two placed at a distance..11.from country. The medium heat of the two it
each other can be said to possess the same newly the sante, but about double the eau- done by art to give dryricae to tlw so.'1 and
�dow.�1 bo"orae `t only-
kt f •
ink
be Do 3,
meliorate a naturally moist 'Climate; an. • l c,t y r f g perhapsDC
climate, because each a subject to partici- uty of . rain u falls in the west;
the winter this sery important branch 01 bu.blDdry wilt ►.. t chemical means would ultimately be
lar infiasnees not affeetmg the other to :helm, .then an bkewi.e milder, sad the heat lure "all afterward. gra. that atteut••d wbich -dittos `rod fur restoring it : but if the be
time d,rlrae. Tbe wuui.a regtoa of in I trees tba on this nut toast. Pasture uneucccesi;:1, •n attempt might be made to
earth is within 234 degrees of latitude on i and trees thrive weft in the west, fur bumf- the subject deserves. discover Selden substance herrn • atria
each side of the equator all round the' day does not seem to impede the growth of In proportion, the land is cleared disco for the carbon uf the ink which re
globe, because the. earth in daily turning piano; rt, however, checks tbclr fructt8ca- froth tunrt. and drained of its exuberant mile on the rand ter tittle fur the
arpos.. that put more tmmedutely to the bions, and without a proper degree of heat mom••', its climate become. more regular, haet1 �� v y
sun. Io - proportion as we advance from they do not arrive at matunty. N head •'ld moderated in its extremes of tempera- Paper i1,eI Lie eats Lace occasionally
the equator towards the poles,. the climate and Ltoeolehire barley, sometimes. ...dead taro. When a territory is shaded with a been Lithographic
in polumn. In such 'sultan -
becomes
more'tedtperate and cool, yet io a of tipping it five or •.:t weeks after they continuous canopy of trees, the leavers and
very variable manner. Of two countries have come re their full growth, will be • branches intercept the beams of the sun in cgs a separate ',tune seems to have been
at an equal distance from the equator, one! come nearly stationary in told icuoas.-. their passage downwards, and present them required fur each colour, and considerable
will have a hot another a cool climate, o.c la the .old season of 1799, they trade, in
dry and another moist, ,s Climate, Indeed, some places, aicueely any advance to tbree
depends very materially Oa relative situa- months. Beene likewise require a compe-
tion, and also on the nature of the country. tent degree Of beat, and Polish oats will not
The climates of Europe and America are I succeed without it; great moisture stops
very different wader the saute latitude. tbo rapidity of their growth. 1f, bowever,
From what has bleu already stated in they once reach a certain length, their fu-
ture progress is not easily checked. From
this arlws the remarkable difference which
is not•unfrequeotly to be observed between
the ripening of certain ;,orttoos of the same
field. In favourable seasons, the white and
reference to the diffusion and radiation of
heat in the atmosphere, and also of the don -
may of air at different heights, it will be in-
terred that climate depends on exposure to
the sun's rays, and also on elevation. That
district will possess the most geoial climate black oats ripen alike, bat in cold ones the
which, during both sumtner and winter, black will greatly outstrip the white Io ear-
ly maturity. Hence the predilection of the
btlsbandmen of the Orkney Islands fur the
black oats in preference to the white. Bar -
that the sun's rays strike the land, the ley and bigg in Surrey, aro equally early
stronger will be the heat: thus a eloping and good; buten worse cimmates the barley
bill, wbichcatches the rays for the greatest will once be stationary, while the bigg
length of time throughout the entire year, will continue to ripe.."
will a better climate, other circum- It has been observed by Sir Humphry
stances being equal, than a flat ground.— Davy that the great vanalioos of the tear -
So well is this ender -stood in the grape perature which ate experienced is Britais,
countries on the Rhine, that the right bank may bo ascribed to six different eircum-
of that river, which faces the sun, is reckon- stance.: -1. Latitude; 2. Height; 3. Vi-
ed to be much more valuable than the left, asity to the sea; 4. Prevalence of certain
winds, and shelter; S. Aspect and expo-
sure; and 6. The soil. But the latitude,
aspect, and soil, have le • apparent effect
in varying the temperature of the climate
thee the other three circumstances mcs-
11.0d.
As already stated, there fs not a coa-
sidsnble betght above the leval of the sea
a raufbcient soypty of air to promote rapid
hes most fair towards the sun, which ts of
only a moderate elevation, and is sheltered
from cold cutting winds. The more direct
and it produces the final. wmDes. With re-
spect to elevation, it is important to recol-
lect, that as we ascend the air diminishes
in quantity. A person breathing at the
top of Mont Blanc, draws into his lungs
only half the quantity of air he does at the
level piths see. V.getatio■ is similarly
erected a1 that elevation. ladependeatl7)
of the blighting effects of cold on legit
grounds, it is obvious that Is these situs- regetauon, and therefore in this respect it
Lions vegetation cannot possibly proceed a absolutely impossible to improve climate;
with the same energy as low-lying districts, for by no process of tit can we increase the
for the plants are not allowed the same quantity of atmoapberic fluid at the top of
quantity of air. a uOeatain or en higb•lylog ground*. As
Both, therefore, on recount of the retard- the atmospheric fluid is a vehicle for the
ing stilets of cold, and a defcieecy of at- conveyseom a both bat and light, another
moepberie air (strictly a detlemscy of txy• very atrosg reams m given for there being
gee ti vegetat.oe restores a longer Utes to
come to maturity es high than on low
ground.. isral, a bought of 400 feet
requires tee derv' earlier *owing then tdw
meet • Altboegh this le tbe caw wltb m-
oppet t:. .Meatier, R cannot be and to be
no with rowed .to latitude. it is knows
that same visits. possess r more
mammae thy, farther to e
being fayMqitem Penis
nretrgr 11041, shelter,
w
ter, tied e
to Oa •
the per
geem se
is nearly as early se in Sts meet soothers
massa. 1. the aert►, the eemmesee- myons horny-rhese vises dteta.t from the
E 1.1
Mth,
.hu
cure
"It is well knows tbat
the ditihs.et bade of
hors extremity ed Semisoft,
alertly • poor chilly climate to • high -lying
enthildri. unless it be situated a-ar the equa-
tor. Tia only way in which tbe climate
et great elevation may be improved, is by
giving shelter from winds, thus eauang the
grwiade to retain that share of beat which
isallotted to them.
Vinosity to the ecu greatly moderates
abe.spartlyof s astarelly cold aMmate.—
Tb onup•retitre mtldee.e of chef waiter* is
$maimed asap be aeeoe.ted for frets its be-
teg, ,whit is Ma met remote distract.. ee
wear tie sea. 1. ieglasd, as the ooenity
vs•br•e;ar, the tbmrmemeeter has a greeter
owes than 1 lllostl•d, where no pace is
from communicating the heat felt to open
situations. The ■uperebundant moisture
of the ground, as in morasses and stagnant
ditches, not only rises to clouds and tugs
to obscure the sky, but cools down. the
natural beat of the earth. No evaporation
Can take place 'without the Ica. of heat; colours had porton• cut away c,irrcrpund-
ontinually under 1 ing to those pails of the stone inked by the
evaporation, its (teat a continually flying Ornv;nus uoee, then scceral cul.,urs wglu
and moist ground being c
ell's For these .carers nil uncleared coon- be printed from the saute stone: brit thews
tries in high latitudes possess extremely prineiplas der nu! appear to protium) much,
inclement winters, while their summers are e*ctrpt fur cease ,slyiictd.
•
short and intensely hot; but al soon as the... _
muses of forest are extirpated, and the.
ground drained, a great change tar the bet- STATfa?.C', or 1.9wner.—Y,0T 4LO, attach
ter is eflbcted in their winter and summer extent' its intellectual, if not it'', t..pugrs.
weather: the winters become shorter 'acd phicel, iadentty, from Iktlutal Ureen u1
less cold, and the summers longer end lers i'hurnbnm fir cn (tufa miles) from }bore•
hot, a greater equability of fine weather lar tish'1'uwn 4. lltfxtua,hsevenudle�f ; mime
tog thin diffused throughout the year.— houu;ee are taither number upwards of 200, -
Tb. climate of Canada and other ports of 000 and to -occupy twenty 'grave nide, of
North America Is at preterit e:uwly under.
care, or very good mechanism, must hare
been employed to adjust the proper to each
stone. 1( any two leads of ink should be
discovered mutually inadbesivc, ono .tone
might bo employed for two inks; or if the
inking -roller for the second and rube,queia
Dung thin process of artificial improvement.
In Britain, such a process has already
been effected, and we now enjoy t:;e Witte
sings of a climate comparatively free of ex-
tremmues of temperature, whether 111 ltw
tinge' mg cold of winter, or the short jaonse
heats of summer, both of which are adverse
to the interests of argrieulture.
In those cburater in which the treats.f
winter aro long anti severe, aa in Canada
or Nova Scotia, n correspondingly large
quantity 0f snow (alas W abeam thu ground.
This is a fortunate compensatory arrange-
mentin the scheme of nature, for without
those deep scows, lbs whole tegetabies on
the ground would be destroyed. Float, by
expanding and rupturing the wastrel. in
plants, destroys them as effectually as of
they were acurched up by intense heat,
Around, hal a palpitation of little bees thrui
!,000,000 ul puulr, or rather tweeb.. Ita
leviathan body u Composed of nearly 10,000
'trent*, lanes, alley,' squares, puce$, ter -
rates Ise. It cotsurecs upwards ef 4,369,-
00011s of animal food weekly, which a
washed down by 1,4J0,000 barrels of beer
annually,, errclusive of ether ligatdr. Its
reatat Is at least I. 7,000,000 a' year, and it
pars for luxuries 9 iuoifutls at least A:18,-
000,000 a year, dutx alone. ft has t;37
chtrchos, - t107 disseelia places of worship,
upwards of 6000 public houses, and 16 thea-
tre..
ASRCDOTR o► GRoseR I•'RKDlitICA COta.
nth '1'aaoiutan.—G.. 1•'. C.,ok war at cer-
tain periods as mad air any iama°ef Belli ant
or 51. 1..ikeo,. On one occasion he (parad-
ed ait'i n private suldrer rat a public house,
and lbcrelore a covering of snow re of the %hell he tt 001 so far a• to ehaileugo Lon to
greatest use itt We vegetable kingdom.` tight : upon winch the eeldior declined, be-
lt baa been iometrmes.tppu..J that now ranee he (Co.•k) wan rich, and the ierson,
is a fertiliser of the soul, but this rests on , present ows.ld, he,slIrrmnf, laveur tut i,—
D o correct foundation. snow a only valu- " i.00l• cis• herr, Sir, all 1 months in the
able as a cover to the ►erbage, and a peeweeI world a hole, £3i3O.' and taking from it
Un to t1e escape of a certain degree nl pocket book a handbill et Irak notes thrust
(rest hoes tho earth dennq the rioter sea. there into the fire, after which lie took up
son. A. the climate improves, it is lees is * fresher and held tt upon the 0.401 11'1 'bet
pored for Dither of there perpenes.; were all coned acd. " Vo,, •mid 1 was rich,'
paid Cook, 'Mew,;itr 1 a.0 a peer as e beg-
gar, wet yeti fight Ire
A Col? tinsel _!ka GAl ..u*. lately sal:0J
into 5 1310pp to perches/ romp emery. In Ibe
own. tf e.,ers.
dl,oia *ire .tiledbrad' An ttee%prnwtnetal tapes, whirh rnntain: en
just gni Jone of her dsughtrn. On the veep. wheeler -meet .,( Rowteereet rlytlor. e.t. -
keeper eongraialsrrns bps ow the re, „r she eve "•Ptii. nnri.inl 110t0emie prrpariunn I. 01 .r•
• agedeent shit- ••f hrr i,.ne. pains, ••1 ,nee 1.1,^2e.lb'..c ht thoroughly p.yefeeta .hr
well ho alri, ser, 1.,► iApy a-. )wet has'tial eau. skin." ,• 'Phis," ear • Herbert weenie. r
400'-tb•7 dims der tube laeg keeeil." critic, ., is tight , . a 1."
.t