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Huron Signal, 1849-06-29, Page 3takt g�gpN SIGNAL. FRIDAY, JUNE 11, INC A PEW THOUGHTNS ON UOUft/It.-IWRN- Naw dal oke Musireel - Madams have spft the tied el dere folly sad wickedness, ad are beam - Mg sayable abides reasoned with, we will offer a few seta thoeghte for their serious considera- te.; and as de Quack Nye of bis medicine, "if it fir se good, it will do no harm." W. formerly asserted, sad we now repeat the assetuoa, that then is is feeling 01 principle in human satin which can iasriaisely, or from the were lep•Ir of the moment, be ted to *apnea itself ia acts of violent public outrage, by any gaestirs of pasads, shillings and pence ; or, is foot, by any piston whose effect is in the fu- ture. There u.GeUagof deatructive vengeance is the hams mid, and when it is aroused by semi sudden end unexpected atrocity, Inflicted to wastes cruelty, either upon our peewee or upon our eysepathire, it rushes fon., with the reek - hewer and aaaibiliting fury of the tornado ; u, for instance, is the case of the Eases Blacksmith with • the poll -tea gatherer, oto the case of the Parisian mob with the procureseltleo. Is thea* instances, all the valuable feelings of oernature were outraged and convulsed oto the spat, and on the instant ; and the penalty annex- ed to this temerity, in both instances, was death, terrible, cruel, and unrelenting! But the future evils of an act can only be apprehended or dieco- vertd by deliberate calculation, and even then amount to nothing mora than probability, and W attle, seer can become cringed with probabili- st', for the some delibenuoa that enabled her to p51001" the probaLility, would ;at once suggest the impropriety and folly of being tonged— therefore to attribute the atrocities of the Moot - oval Tories to a casual oathurat of popular iodlg- matisa uta exhibit human nature in much deep• r dep aiity than she is eapabls of Jisplayiag, eves is ter met savage condition. Ther atro- cities were, in reality, the malt eta regularly preemeteted system o(wiekednees-•they are 0mt- venally regarded u ncb—and as seek they will he historically trssamitied to:posterity. There Geese so roan eggs lying an the street for the aceomedatioa of the mob, oboe neeassity for each nisteeialo was altogether a eoetimgeaey Ad a alk d an "mature of popular feeling," where toes had more prepared with the weapons through which that feeling was to be meni(e.led, and had waited a eooeidenble time for the op. portunity of using thew weapon", may'ppar pardonable in such men as Sir Attie McNaa or Juxta Morn renews, but it exhitlte a lamenta- ble igtaraoce of the philosophy N bums nature! The man *be would bring the dagger from • distance, and who would wait patiently the ap- prsaeh of his victim, would seareely obtain a verdict of manslaughter—he would at once be de- nounced .a a wilful, and deliberate murderer.— The Montreal outrage was, therefore, as we have formerly stated, the result of • deliberate platy, and had no immediate relates to the posieg of the Indemnity BIII, or •ny ether particular ict. The stotive which suggested the flagrant viola- tioa of all the principles of ci•ilization, ie perfect- ly udenteed gad duly appreciated throughout the continent" of America end Europi : and the iaadeq acy of the means to the end will exist se • perpetual monument of the band lolly and es- travagant (erectly of Toryism. The ago of oppressive minorities has passed a- wry from Canada, and the Coeetitetion affords • bat one method 01 redress to the disaffected Ar- ty, sad that i" the privilege of endeavoring to nb- teib by fin oGeeeasiea, soilAlthea peaceable tunas, a public venl'at in favor a its views, thereby redeeri0g its policy triumphant at the next general eleetios. This, we say, ie the poly path et power wbich the Cosstitutioa•of Canada recognisesia legitimate, --ad the party which refuse this plain, powerful and equitable method of redress, stands chrgable with contempt of the coaatitetio0• with contempt of onto*, and with contempt of their fellow colo iets. When ate redrew is afforded, outrage eau never be taken se as erpremien of public mon- ies, because this would mortally bedecidisgthat the majority of maskiod ars opposed to petee sad justice; which we wo0id deem an insult to our salon. One man may set fire to a hour, while tees thoarnd may be quite unable to ex- tingaish it,—bat the burning of the ham is no proof that the tea thousand were gratified with the incendiary—and thou h it be the beck of h e b r r dmitted that they were gratified, that is too peed the righteou,ne.e of their caner, or the moral rectitude of their principles. One ruffian may assault of even assassinate a Governor Gen- eral, while a hundred thousand man may !nesse power to prevent the outrage. Bot each rufianiem is no proof of the "tate of public pw inion. The Remelts merely prove that, in defiance ofeivili- zation, law and religion, society is rill coned with certain anfonaste ruffians The legitimate tendency of such conduct is to break up society, and, in feet, to exterminate tour species. Then is no feeling i0 inen'e nature that will impel him to burn a honer, or to throw missiles, outrageously, as the Queen's Repro - testate', merely bemuse • Bill which had bees discussed and partly acted oto for eight years pre- aiwaly, hod bees declared &witj decided. Bat, AMU we deny the ezietenee o('this feeling, we • ds am dewy the existence of a feeling of reretvve. Then is a prlso:ple to roan'" Datum which cam be called ism fakes, r.gef.1, deadly activity by deeds of.nglty s seta et wawa catty.. Aad upas the Cal mirth wing tither at aha Qsees'a Reprweaative, or epee witamoiag Iles gar rising from the Provincial libraries, had seem patty blown • bullet Ihtssg► the ws.i.e of tar. Aria. McN&., or Jaxru Mora FRIES, Of est fire to the boom of tbe Hos. Grease Mor- tar, the eeaduet would have bees at mese. *oh the peiseieles of eivilisatioe, of morality, .sd d re/igloo, het it weeld, at (east, hare hoes is hsrnmey with es aeksewledeed primiple abeam setmr—tbe pelmeiple e1 redgeasce and retests. Of a8 the arg.mrer that have ever bees bresgtl gee lbs &.. 1... of a plant pelt - smarties. es ray ..,town dew= is tier - tidy tie user rattle, end at the came tines the teat slsmgsssue ; ,t w fettle heelless 11 previa manias political more tine it does religiose—it is deammes ►eesur it ora he need with equal ie'by Mt► psnM.--thin is a law u awn Via : A HINT ABOUT ROAD MAKING. wan* sesta to say " if pee wutoaly burn ewe shay heesss l'II try to bars nee of year* ;" sad although the property ef the torte* e' far 4om beteg eawa*v., yet it is coebwtible—and is would be fined epee ural that the 11..se of the Hem, Chiet ,t Moerar, oto Mouse is Brewery, would jest bum w ounly, and se brightly, as abehrltaraeat Hoar if the tortes will jest to mehl a dime fact*, perhaps they will a (stere leek set fee more roused atgumeats ILaa the tech and the renew.ggs. CIIURCII E$TABL18IlMENT. Ws were, last week favoured by the Usteed Presbyterian 8y0.od with a handsome pamphlet of fifty-sia pages oontaioing as aeeouat or the Proceediage of the Committees reapeeuvely op- poisted by the Free Church, sad the Ualted Presbyterian Church in Cased', with • view to effect • Union. Were we ler conversant with the daeaaion of the quoetiom of State religion than we are, we would be disposed to say that the wend, lucid arguments whirls the United Presbyterian Synod law advanced against the civil ..iablabntent al Cbneiianity are conclusive, and would certainly obtain a verdict iu favor of the Voluntary Prin- oipk,framevc nn rational man who rade them. But a long intimacy with tilie discussion hes convinced as that there are oo the minds of even some good men, • kind of moral obtuseness, in relation to this question, which no argument— no process of reasoning can penetrate. And of all the denominations of els ' 'ane that have contended for State pay, the Free Church deno- mination certainly appears the most anomalous. We understand, distinctly, the doctrine of the old Auchinsaugls Covenantera of Scotland.— They contended, even to the death. that the civil Magistrate was bound to provide fur the tempo- ral necessities of the Church; but they also commuted that the Church was first bound to make the ctrl Magistrate a C HURON DISTRICT ter ; in other words, they maintaiaed that the Church ehontd prevent a king from becoming a king till he should first assume the obligations of the " Solemn League tad Covenant." Io short, their view of State religion was derived either from a confused idea of • Theocracy or from the Pbaisiacal feeling, of "stand thou aside for 1 am holier than thou!" or, perhaps, from both. To. existing State religions of Scotland and Fogland relieve themselves from the dilemma of the (;err neuters by merely contending for the pay without the iueonvemence of avowing any principle.— They neither ask nor care *better the kin; is a Christian or a Jew, • Moravian, or a Quaker— they do not care whether the people are Metho- dists, Marlemans, Unitarians, l:ornas Catho- lic. or infidels—rho king and ibis people are booed to support the Church. And it is a mat- te of equal indifference whether the Church be Lutherse, Calvinistic, Arminian, Of Paeseyaie in its creed, or whether it be Fpleeopalian or Presbyterian 10 its Government, it is still the CkarcA-Land the kis( and the heretics are bound to furnish it with a "competent portion of the good things of this life !" The is by far the surest and safest ground upon which • defence of the cempolsory payment of religion can be.butit. it el -edema room for argomeet, and in attacking it you are really attacking working. Then is 0o principle involved is it except the mystery of the " Apostolic SacceeaioO," and we would jest ea soon thuk of disputing the tenth of Baron M.nebanese's Adnaturw as of the Apostolic Suceeenon ! Time, It will be seen that the Scotch Covenanters defeedeJ Church Establish - menu from a beset that tier, the Coreaaoters, were ezelesively right; and :he esieting estate- lahmente of Bemis eo•ted for rational Lip- pert, from a betel that being richt r being wrong has nothing to do in the matter ! The Free Church repudiates both of thew brliefs--- She does not claim the right of competing the king to swear to the " Soleme League and Coronae:," and she does net allow to the king the right of detennie's( what doctrines should or should net be preached, and yet she esetende that the king of the State is booed to provide religions instruct:on for the people, or at least that a Church (for she dare not say the Cbarch) is warnared to weir" nipper, from the State funds ! It may appear rather bold to assert that mankind we incapable of distingaiehing between religions truth and religions error ; but we think the aeserriee i., nevertheless, tree. And though we should reason and expatiate moot logleally on the beauty, and harmony, and distinct, and nettle characteristics of religious troth, yet OUT *hole logo is upset by the simple, every -day fact that thele is 0o question among mankiid on which they are so much divided. And after all the wn tiog, and teetering, and debating whi u has bewildered society on the question of Church esublubments. the whole tegument may is thus comprehended. The party which claims support from alae cors• moo funds ea promiscuous commute' t y, eom posed of various creel, mot either be prepared to say, "Stood thou aide, am." or to may that it is better to rapport a multitude of errors than to o.gleet the support of ems truth ; and therefore, as is the instances e( the Clergy Reserve" and Meltwater' proposed University Bill, the public shall pay for the m eiateaaeee of troth *d false- hood indiscriminately ! Bot this is certainly net the bat method of obtafaisg • triumph fr truth. We believe that then is es 'thereat 'beauty end an energy in truth which if allowed fall seeps, will eertaisl), secure • victory for her. Bat i( mankind always exert an aanaisnl inllwace to keep her and error on the same 4..1, thea, her victory will be atlases in the femoro. The Churches in Canada are all Free in so far as patr••ers and State isterferesee with their creeds an cosies ed, and if then ie no daemon* between the Free Church ad the residuary Church ea the voluntary gaestioa, we are utterly usable to perceive say otter difference between taste—,be poiet of distinct °. about State intr- feenow, in spiritual matters, appear to 1w, is this e0u•try et (east. a mono e6rnartisrw Dot the voluntary priseipt• is a prineipla, and is walk e0teedieg fee, *sou u Cauda. And assuredly Met/sited Preebyeeise Breed Iso gives a elear sad fe•sibls impodtis• d it is the psephlet w befees tea Mo Term see wade. 1i, the monies" gives le sur lessee of lest work end t5Jay, Laded " presto( the Nsptive." sir Tan twelfth Las Meeting .( the Dodd - leg 8oewty Won plow i.- oTnw *maims r 7 coolook 1. the British Hotel p easy of our feeders are few aware dist is. of the first and beet mcawres pawed du- nug the late demote of Parliarueat is • 8111 is- trodeced by the Ila. [homy Juien BOOLTUs, e outlsrw the turmauos and (acarporatios ei need sod Bodge Commutes u Upton Canada—tor, to (wake it a lode plainer, and to apply it specially to our eetrst...epees ; we wish ter readers, and all token, the inhabitants of the flares 1)u - met, to undentead that an Act of Parliament n • ow 141 eatet.ice autheaimg ea, Or say ..ebtr a( es, sat less ilea five, to fuim seroelves into a Canpsey (r the purpose 4t grneltag the read between the Town of Go.ench and itatteabury's Caren, and of erecting Tull -Gates and collect- ing tolls aufficienr to keep the road in repair, sed to yield a fair interest not exeeedmg nuke pet seat o• the outtai1 capital. The repose dcros- e ructing • good gravel road on this line is esti- mated at two handfed and fifty pounds per mik, or three thousand pouode for the whole distance of twelve miler. and at the present average •- mount of traffic on the road, • toll of six pence, or one half penny per mile, will keep up the road aid yield an interest of not less than ten per cent. on three thousand pounds. And surely the man who would grumble to pay sizpeoce for theben- efit of twelve 'ilea of a good gravel road for his teem, is not sufficiently civilized to be the own• er of a team—he is richly entitled to the !limey of mud three feet deep, beautifully blended with logs and atumps. Now what we wish to be dis- tinctly understood, ie simply thus, that sit hun- dred shares, of five pounds each, amount exactly to three thousand pounds, •fed we .feel Notified that in ibis ere of " Leagues," and petitions, and addreers, and coming "Conventions," when thousands—hundredso( thousands eat be induced to tare in every specie" of nommen; th• Dis- trict irtrict of 'lanai can smelt produce Goo men who aro willing to unite in • " league " for making good roads. This is a league which 110(111 have the honor of becoming a rer.Lty in the production of good. It will net inteuere with the religious or political corns of any man—itis cheap, useful. sod, above, it will be prefooble. In such • League, speechifying, hot stuff, •nil Mr. Giles will be !.moral superflariu. 10 short. tee, who have .never been connected with any body's League, are perfectly willing to count as home( the G00 membera of the " Gravel hoed League," and if er.y respectable parties, Le the \\'big,'l'o- ty, or Radical, will cal a meeting on the suleeet, or adopt any other plausible means to obtain the formation of ta;a League. we will cheerfully give ,three inscrticns,ia the Signal, to theirllrijaotice. epitome either (egos toward. do nothing 1 robe,* the people mow beteg is those previews (reel the head -tattoo' of a contrast between, t4eir tows inferior position and that enjoyed by the ctttatose of the republic by their side—we shall ►Lounte the nu* colonists frua our rule : they will seek to obtain libitum (Aimee in the readiest way which offers, and that will then be by mining the United States as separate and independent •tate.., and becoming memhere of the Republ canefederatinn. They w.II testi, us with • boatels feeling—they will leave oto probably after • rebellion and a war —they will throw themselves upon the United Staten for w:stance. That assis- tance will be smut a wet with the L'o,tod States wall follow ; acd whatever may Le rho valour of our arnt.ce, or the skill of our generale, the result to inevitable : the whole Continent, will be violently wrested from our grasp, and ee"shill remain shorn of our provinces, seriously irjurcd in our means, gasping and bleeding at every pore, with a world made our bitter foes, and without • friend or al'y, either in E"rope or Are::ea. , " This language 1 have always held ; and ter order to prevent such a fatal catastrophe, f have pressed upon rho attention of succes- sive Colonial Ministers the necessity o(pre- paring the colonies for emancipntioa and independence, not only with respect t. En- gland, hot to the United State. also. They have either been unable or it i*'.:ling to adopt or to frame any scheme for that pur- pose. But 1 did myself once propose a pion with that in. view, under very cnnoue and impoelenteircumstarcee, but without nuc-' ccs "-1Jirmiegkaes Journal. tide Oast IN btk se bah el May, Lw having guess to England) and the Bill wan tiaelly passed se the Seth, and a/mooted to es the SOth. Mr. Coyle, io no way known, sup- ported the measare. The amitosis olthe article referred to, appears to be to ga.n some pod Leal support fur Mr. Cavae}. It is mainly ..wing to ihu Ileo. lilt. t:uineroI: that %Le B.:I was cooled, and it le but ► arna:l retire for h:s kind •Mvtcw, to say so —hut knowing something of the matter, 1 cannot c.Ouw toe above reu.ar!•s to the Gantt* 10 ?ass current, w ibottt men' cauuadictcd. More mixt.: bo est,!• i0I1 I. Etratfurd, 1h:b June, Itl4J. STsatvuau, ler:. J,.ce. I849. i3O •out. 'niton ../' Ti:: Isuroe •ioe•f.. Deaf Nu, -1 oharne a vor9nuniCat40n in vont paper of the 15th lust., sone! " Foedenck Par- ker," expressing great thesetis(actinn at ftndiag hu name attached to a petition wn!ch lay in my Store for signature. Parket' (.uher•in-law was tate perana wl.o put Fu tame to that pr: t:on, end with Parker's own knowledge. who told him Illat he was cuing to non the i'r:::.or. and would put down Lie uenie ciao. Putter's r a•cr ,Sas aftet wnrds scored trot, and waa never !Wm how - fed ted as he wished to Henke it n,.pnr. 1 ow in (.'oder cast the :!r:re the petit:on lav here, pod if trete wee acy'lang dobe in the qty of Opole t'stker.* .lame without his own cov:senl, he nary thank hie o urn blends fur it, as 1 wit rout s..t"sir arty thing of the kind to be done to soy i et:rio0 'eft in dirge, (no nutter for what pu:poae :taut' Wr. are extremely gratified to see is the Ba1- .rst C'ourirr, that our friend the Rev. 1I %emote Mei a..,. Church of England Clergyman, of Ca- kenham, has felt it a duty to come out with a series of Lettere in defence of Lord Error. and the Ministry, Mr. Mct.xl.s, from the In:teener wlneh he possesses over an extent re populous D.atrict, and especially from hie intimate con- nection with the Orange Lodgeeof the Bathurst and Dalhousie Dielr.cte. as their chaplati: ^'oar, undoubtedly, he the author of much good. by the manly .rd u, right position which he has assume ed in the present crises. The following are the propoaiuone which he purposes to prove in refer- ence to the rudemoity B.i1 : On' Retirees New, Wont —to the same week in which Losu ELGIN'S Piepatch, detail. isg the atrocities of the Montreal Tories, reach- ed England, a work on COIOOiulion, containing two hundred and fifty page", just issued from the London Pies". The author is Joke Mermen Rural co, the learned and talented Member for Sheffield. A. might be expected, a large por- don of Mr. Aozecci's work is devoted to the British Colonies of North America, from which we give the following extracts, fully persuaded that Mr. RoLavca's work will do men for the naimate prosperity of these Colonies, and for their permanent corm -coon with the Mother country, than all the political barking, and bitter billinpgate, and ho.e-burning* that have dis- graced Canada for the last six ma0t1a " I have carefully abstained from all die- cuesion of any actually existing grievarco or dispute in any colony. My cnnclnsinne rest on logo rcetilts. The petty squabblce of potty pcople.l have no .;wire to eve .n.— But wishing to deal with systems, C hate Bought for large reaults .n the history— from the teaching and experience of centu- ries, acid on that inundation my proposal rests. Tho reader will see, that through- out this whole work my object is to lay a foundation for legislation—that from the first to the last roam 1 hero an Act of Par- liament in my mind ; and ho will be of opin- ion, if my reasoning produces upon his mind tho effect I desire, that without syste- matic calculation preceding legislation, all attempts at systematic legislation will bo (Neloea and doomed to fail No one disputes at this time tho assertion that our provinces in North America meet soon bo indopendent. A few years since and I wns-nearly hooted out of the land for stating this disagreeable truth. But now rho world forgets its own injristicee and quietly and complacently acquiesces. Bat sten i did make that statement it was al- ways with she carefully cemented proviso --1f you do not take stops immediately of a peculiar and decided character. The se• paratioo of the British North American col- onies from England, in itself never to mo a➢Psired • calamity. provided • First That tho separation was amicable. And second, that they morn not added to the United States, but were formed into one indepen- dent federation, governing themselves, and netted in bonds of friendship with England. Tho extension of the power of the United States to the North Pole I have always con- sidered an event fatal to the maritime supe- riority of England. Possessed of the St. Lawrence the United States would in fact have no frontier to:defend. iter offensive and defensive powor would bo increased by that acquwition to an extent teat would ren- der leer influence dangerous to the general liberty of the uterld. 1 seek, therefore, to prevent that acquisition. We cannot do It by doggedly and tenaciously attempting to keep thing. as they ars on the Amencan continent, but we ought to look forward, and so prepare for the future, as to render the existence of a new confederation not only probable but certain ; a confederation which would prove a counterpoise to the gigantic empire and influence of the United States ; a confederation in which thero are really no hostile interests. No slivery exists there to separate north from south ; no variety of climate, by producing different commodities, renders necessary different markets, sad thus teed. to separate inter- ests. The chief modems of ilritish North America find their beet market in England or the dependencies of Rngland,and there is. therefore, no jealoosy between the separate provinces, created by diffbront commercial eoneeetliene and oeceesities. Geographi- cally they w one people, and may in des- pite of their rigorous climate, form by nni Oto a really powerful hMnt• enmmimuty. which, with the frhndship sod alliance 0( pngIlasmmdd,� nay net only easily muatatn itself Woven but eosstils(e a formidable counterpoise to the UMW States. "1f ere. however, ere determined to eon - side, our colomie' detention immortal—if we " All this violence and criminality were committed under the pretence or imnressiov that a 1:51 for indctnnifyiog rcbc:e t:.d re - roved tho Sovereign's sanction, rind become the law of the land. 1t is my better that Lord i ellit's conduct sin that matter wag both right in itself and accurd,ing to our constitution, and as it seems to involve the inquiry, what ie our constitution, I beg to submit in proof that the Governor General was perfectly Juetifiat:e, the (.:owing pro- positions : I. The Act for indemnay,ng partici in !.ower Canada introduced by Mr. Lafon- taine for losses incurred dur,ng the Rebel- lion makes nn provisions fur paying t'.0 $Y THIS MORNINGS MAIL. Toe Varna L'u Bauc..—iter Majesty the Q.i10 had Ares gracwu.ly pleated to write as aotargraph letter to Lady Eki.s expressing her drew* to stand Spoofed. for too heir of Lord Els a, and that he be celled A't:tender Vote, after bet aajrety (Alex• andr.11a Victoria.) Thin atMolt�eement ,-annul fall to bo groltljn'g fou I.adyLrtgln .:IJ hie lacullency the Gustiest Central ; .inJ sou foul confident Viet the great 1111.41 of poo; le of ('era,::. w' I receive much gratiticetiun Iron it.—G,L/ie. Svirxva C..ug.--A confectioner is N. Yu•e has taker up the newly discovered antidote and remedy tor Chulerl, so.reeeut- ly made known by 1)r. Bird, and b Lhar.y pruporrens ct ulphtbar- 0001 with?he SI Zxe. hod nrndss tbieur ted iu an a•:ccat le cand • ILesl.cinc in k candy . -4, l'Hn .'11naat.T of TkH ado*at'aaT1'MLT. —R.luie ;err.—N:woken put away Jaao- phiss for State reasons, u*rried.agaia►and was the father of illegitimate chi s. Jerome Plat away for American wait is please Na (Sena. Jerottte'a daughtse, the Prineesi Let:t,.'.uf; bar left Mr bueband within els year's Lite: morose. Jose• -b hveJ apart f:emu his wife god had illegitimate chadretn. Paine* behaved. to badly that her him - be iuten.'el)band, the Prince 'Be rghere wal.e.1 up this YOU *l:! ceafrr a fav01 an Me oto inie:L:ig door Of too bowie agvert bee, aid eapese. this in your nest raper as 1 do not w ah to lay ted ander say imputetioe lot • •hu•t. of r4!rh I am uees _etakpree ilbiwrosent estrtvel, rseseeo e row. R. Thus ' --- I'teadest. the iuploeed son of l.ow:o Bona- parte sad IItetense I.'auharnots, t'tedaugh- ter of Jneept:are, with hem' alkg!tisate. I: iciee a second 4aegaler married as i'r.giuhman, whom she deserted, and has a lams:y 0i illegitimate children taw Is k'r.Jie. ernme's eldest eon now Ices in Paris with, ab Italian Indy• without marnnge.— Only three of the whole anti now appear at the Preandent'. levee. The President to unmarried, loll Jo sol *about a female cors; aaten of great Wanly. Tun CA LI rte::ata FL% sir.-e-Tbe potiar et resele wblch hate sailed for-U.Iifoveis is 3:11. vas: ISO shape, 1uS barques, 18 brigs, M stehearon, and a steamers. -TIE. hat cotnp.rises vcstle which have railed from London. Liver; not, •Bordeaux, 1 F:ets the Lei:en N.oe. f trans THE. MUVT1tL:AL RIOTS. A more!*legra•tor.l rote than th*t got tip by the Tory feet :on to Carea'a,at;ainrt the 14,3for pay:'g I':e Rebe:lu n !„oases of ; 1, has seldom cmc with.11 the range- d our ob.erva'ton. It w•eeamelees, orner- iest, and daceroce. T!.ev crmpL..n u•f the iejast'te t.f an set •'ei,tct was ono Of 1110.1 orrn measures of pcliey at:en in pow- e-, b•-: which t' oy had reit t .e chance of cartyrz out. None of 'A parties to be c. m; e: .'cd for the less or !b0-1 property dur:n the retro:aero had teen legally ton- t:ctcd of 'taking pari in the nettreak. Thi pretence that the kis was a premium oh, ,1';loraltr, was. therefore, s mere subtedg' fuze. '1' a realround 6f objection 11 the recut:re waw,• that it wee proposed by a :Cow*, and, Antwerp, as soli se from tbp 1. acral blioistrv-.a.peejelly by a 1llirits- • United :...tee.—Bulletin. - try co;np4iaing i'rcnch colonists. The To------ I1ei, the spoiled pets of the Imperial Gov- -- - i• c� :meat, sed ie. favorite. of tae(tesaito talll'tJ:1 DUAL t I;U14,tDa . ocicty. Governor Gcr.crals. were out of power, and— • t':ciropponents in—thio is the true secret TBC Tyrr .f'Tii LOAN Ml:E77 IP of their unscrupulous opposition. They are ®r 11,0 Sncicty wilt take- place at the the same parties *he endeavoured to tnako Lriii'ti Ilutel. on Saturday the 301h the university a huge m0oopnly, -In the lata. at 7 is clecit. P. M. handy of. the Episcopalians—who tried to Pt Urdu turn the. common achvula of Crnads, estab-, 'r► TIIOJI.\II KYDD, Sec'7. (shed for the purposes of eccular edncept or, Goderich,'yuno 411. 1819.- !re-t9O to ecc:urian-purpoeea—.whn, when in pow - 0r, 101:11ned office, by the favor of eruece.•• CANADA Ia1FL' ASSURANCE e:cc t i overoors and the folly of Home Coo- C 0.11 P •'I X Y . loser, of Rebels. er:meats, against the *m ees of the people D. The history of tho several enact and who, when reduced to their last i dii)e, mints relative to this r:b„•ct, worn the re- attempted, at the recent general elections hellion, shoot• conc:t artcly ltat 0.0 G. ver- to fir !•e 11.0 s: pang of three religious do- nor General could not wui hold ;:.a consent n•tm,nai ons, by committing a wrong upon from the measure. the rear of Odu community, end an outrage 111. 'l'!tat the nat.:re of Rreponetble sir reprcecntative l:overnmen', left him n) al- ternative but to concur in the n1r,ttr•r. 1V.•The conduct of hot Predecossore Orem 1838 justified him in sanctioning the said Bill. eO V. That the measures of every conserva- tive Administration, from the Rebellion to the pre'ont time, justify the Governor Ge- neral in hie policy. VI. l'ine!ly, j latero to -Lower Caneda and fairly the principle of responsible goterb- .natrnctions from !Some, requited him to x0001 n Canada, has been gros<1'r (n+felted, eenct:on t�c me :n.' .and ik:treated by the molt. Lord }!gin, ." - - because ho has aJoitte•1 t!:r prt:eiplo of ('sutat the row . "Canada for tho Canadians," and bowed to We. understand that CrowLands is the the will of the focal Parliament, has .raised Tewnsh. o of Ashfir:J and Wawseesb are with against himself a storm of indignation.— dnwo Irote, .a:., tot sushi tinkle* an apprnpria- 1 morality and religion. -\Ye cannot, thc-cfore, !,ick upon this agitation, as an honest one. It tans got up, not by • great, party, hot by an unscrupulous faction, to serve their own Fetish purposes ; and it has only attained art measure ofsucteea.by et;rrin( up internal jealoustel,'and footes- ting the prejudices of race rgainel race. Singularly enough, 0.e f.-st 1I:tieb Gov- ernor n1,0 has cam t 0•:t honestly and too of one Million of Acres fur Common School purposes has been made. There iC, however, :*aides numerous lot; 1eanere.1 over the Iwo townships a block o: c.ce.ie;t ia-1, conal ;:mg over Leo thousand acres of Clergy Reserves situated on the 12th, 130 and 13th Coeceas;ons of Wawanosh, that "'are .211 for sale and can be purchased for eight sai:liogs pet ante payable :n tea equal annual inmate: ors. T115 Sube,ibcr hating been appointed :\.end of the - "CAN:\il-\ L1FlJ ASSURANCE CO.," is prel•ered.to Iseult° proposals for Ana - ranee, ■fed w.11 bis happy to afford.' to tmy. petatetr Cie tleeereety information, tees to the priacylee tel the lu.tttou..n. JAJ1li:S WATSON. Godaeieb, 113tb June, 1840. itntetf 11111 n,i Di'I,'id. NOTICE IS 'l'l) wf'i'. Ihcrei rrtr(7l, THAT the Court of. GENERAL QUAR- TE( SESSIONS of the Pcscc, *ad that of the Monet Court, will be holden to, and for this District, on 'CUY:.DAY tlo '1'17;.1 dny of July 0ria. et tho Can't Ileum in 1^0 Town o1 Go,lrr c1, .at the hour of ftt o chek, A.. .M. el which nine aril Lla:c, all Justices of the Peace. (:orcners, Kee re of Gaol* and Moore* of Corr -retina, 1iigb. The constri•ction we can oceu.11 ,tpz- neon the fcroue olcrof the opposition are horo`reqicl tb attend, to dolma pm- " ttre heir(' to mate. esponsiblegovern• form theft- yrhich to their rviyeNI►o meet obnos oue, er rather, unworkable. offices appertain. JOHN McDONALD, . Deem OF JRatxT JOB eaTON.—Tho Bc• Sheriff, lltirou District,' town &wits of Saturday last announces . Sheriff's Office. Gtk!otich, the death of James Johnston, Esq., former -1st June, 1£10. 1 gr—a17 1y member of the Legieletito Adntathly for - r- -o the County of Cat loton; Our contempora- TWO �jOO D FARMS i ry„pays the following brief tribute to• his• }L]t fgAL• memory N E within til •mites, rid the other with- ' ” ltem .rksble for those clever excetttrict O io abunt d miles t)f Got!eneh Tuw6 tree, which obtained for him notoriety, Plot. The first is 1, :T 10 in let Contee- wherever he went, from the Hails of the 8100, Township n( Go.. • .. Legislature, drew n to rho Atfnth:a'iarmstoa , ho was poescred n( manv.retimobi (palates which 164 ACRES, which oriented for him a reputation, that I. boosted at the one cad by Lake Herat, will prove evon still mono enduring, that nod at the other by • PubPe kosd,—sail of an honest mac, and ioJenendant and fear- the seoned is 1.0T 8 is 8th Coocesaton, less politician. Jemmy Johnston, as he Colborne, %V.Diristor, • was farnamliarl termed. was ever the peer man's friend nJ h.,' memory will long bo .preserved b many, to whom in the hour M need, no pt red hnnerlf a true frcnj. !'race to his ash a !"—Glob.. Jam u, x t, . e rcet-)ent of the 1'11 i - c K. Y I ted Steer.. that at 'his ralJoat•'. Nvacille, 'l'enuoaee, on the evening of the lith in- stant. .b'.r:c-sato:*.—\Vo dnde►etnni1 that the Rev. Thomas Rattrar of this city Au re- cede•l from tho corn:...,tion of the \Voe!ey- an blothddist Church in Cemola. As to hit reasons :or mo doing wo understand that to matters ofehruttan doctnoe, he J'acMs from the body merely on a yiui;le, and 0 seems to us • rather nnrrnvrtanl, point in the docrline of ctn.':nn perfection, *1 held by thee church ; on the question of Church Government, we have learned that ho takes t',c emote!, that the whole frame•work of the Weoiot an polity -i• un•eriptursl, and in i*1 orcrarto1 injurious to the civil as we:I s religious tuterest•rof the Wesleyan leu• pie. it in said that in eoneCq•terre of some steps token by the 1;nnfernncr, :,Ir. 1(01101; trot rods shota1T to 00190 hefo►e 1i, public with he 1011014 for srcee:ion ant his v:ee e Of the tornleocy of the West -len Chore, polity.—Pr•rincio.'ist. Tnr; Sut.r;traestEfT Yon Crtr,v re s to hong tested 111 the cater" cones wot't the most rernarkab13 o r 'en.. A rnee le men- tioned in the New York Tribonr, of a ser want girl olio ass most violently tofu-1,yd wlib a diarrhea which weeal,sost ince.. et. A. there wail 00 gentlomaw en the l,onee at the ante, the medical ak 11 of the inmates was put tette test. Camphor woe admin. named without any emcee.. in 'Haynie Or symptoms when one rot the Won of the bowie teeethmight Aereelf of trying sulphur, *►teh the adminut"red to the Weed n( feet grains, .Mi envy noon 'motored the ttrset•n to arch a rate of h.ahh es nimble her le louse teas t• an hour or two. — 1JrUef m . (UWE have received the first number of Wilson's Eclectic Magazine published by Mr. 'metro Wit sou of Belleville. We are always proud to see and to hail attempts to establish periodical l!terature, eriteciaUy in Canada, and we have, oftener than once,- had the pleasure of eomplimeahog Mr. Wit on for hie enterprise to this description of publications. in fact we el- dom feel di ---posed to censure attempts in 1lter•- tore, and it is with reluctance that we pronounce the " Eclectic ci Magazine" "terofsir frombrim 2 nn ireprorameni on the " Vittoria Ma:az:Dr."— Tho Engraving ani the letter prose arc both passable, bat there is evidently the lata of nee Editor. The obly original rttele in the nam!!) -1 is " The Great Cave," by Lf. Bull, and the ad- mission of it into any periodical cannot enhance iia literary character. It is neither poetry nor prose, nor even prom nn woad, as it seems to have been born mad. We hope Mr. Wu..oe will, by reciting the services of come- Literary person, render the second Dumber of the Eclectic Magazine more woribj d pablie patronage. EMIBRAT1ne: — Fourteen hundred and fifty-five passengers were landed at Mt/ - wartime last week, most of whom tiro sock- ing homes in Wisconsin.—ifvllctin. - T- — •–"is�t (olnmanicationo. in the Heron Gazette of the 7tb June, 1 observe certain remarks in •n Editorial, regarding the Rill palmed by Parliament for the Division of the 1Juron District, and env• teioieg very unjust ren-ohne%em the Hon. Mr. Cameron, M. P. P. 9'h+t ML! was paved by the untiring exertion* of 1Tr. Cameron, in which 11ir. itferrieon, M. P. 1' joined, and wan .imported by the aim 0•1 unanimous votes of the memhers of both .idtn sf the Houma. The following para• graph in that article is%ntroe:—"it a well the inhabitants of the District should know. that it i0 almeet entirely owing to the exer- tions of the Hon W. I:aylov, with whose eonearretses the B,I1 premed, that the to*n• slips of Ilay,Stephen, ace., are to remain part of the rict." Mr. Colley 0.e111 no exertions -that aro known, to get the Sell Passed. nerd 1m wee applied tied spoken to se member for the Cenety only,—fob has esp• po, wee est ealeeI•ted are, though It wee expected—but Mt. C.y1.y wee Dot to Cas- CU5TAIMING 100 ACRES, aril is situattd at the Junction of two Poli- tic ltoa1e. r -. to ., r to For 1. T Cu t Fr J'„x. t,, hlelitOY.1LD, Esq. GodoricP, 13th Jute, 184!x, 1119 -if TO 1:i: SOLD,. �etcei;ent Fm, ireu'g Lot No. 141 ar!tlrUand Conces•ien, 'Township of (ietlencb, toirtainirg 1Cu actor -3G of which i, ciente.). The land pit of a amprtor qualm t-, and writ watered. It is situated exact- ly n r.0 mine from alio tows of tioderieb os the Huron Road, and at the junction of aim d.lf•rent road a -.d as it is m the cycler Of a topnluo. at J prosperous Incolity, it w ex- co,len'ly s.Ly'tcd for a !!'.tern stand or a Store. 'Iles fret is well entitled to the ettentton of recross desirous of ss eligible 'amities for b.:eincse, and- will be sold on very rcatemthte lent s. For IartieMare al•T,:y to '1•:,nmas 1).,rk, Taves n • keeper. 1:0,:crich, or to the rrup►tttnt . JONAS Cull. \t::n.r of 11-,rputtry. Juno1J-15x:'•--watf lO -- 1 Ol: Sr1Lf;, THI; %l.1IT!.10M) 13111i\Vi:I.Y P140VI: 1x'1'1', ♦ t,11N properly conga” of three scree on 1 • u.e bur k of the ritnr !daitl•nd. and tm ore road ado leading /e Mr. McDonald'e tlr,.t \?ill. emir (."tench. Upon *loch there ie 1 Mt1AVEnv with excellrtt eel - lerarn, It Malt home and Malt I( In, all rn•upet'to. 'rime i- el.n an ore -ellen' giro for a Ih-ti lery nn the Int, end ohm oweer has a r.,:hI to I'm water on the bank en the opr.,uula rote of the road winch fe suflrlent at all Beam.. of the year for flea. such *00(15. F.e p5Aiewters intending parchment may ally fat by (sits, pn.'egs pain) to DAVID UIJN, Godevfb. OedetN1, clay 11, 11.8. re-ste