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Huron Signal, 1850-02-28, Page 1TEN SHILLINGS et •o.. VOLUMR 10. "Tug GREATEST POaailBLE GOOD TO THE GREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER." (11O1)RRICII, COUNTY OF HURON, (C. W.) THURSDAY, ,FEBRUARY 2$, 1850. NUMBER 1V1.' TWELVE AND SIX AT -Tenn IND Or �RaS' .•,m tat l0ttrn. LIKING AND DISLIKING. et rats*tea - MAO. Y. who hoew the nes- ts, tell ass Hew it w that ieetinct uiil Prompts the heart to her -'.r like set - At its ewe oapracioue w.lt Tell tate by what buklao marc Oar impressions Ent are led tato Gki.g-or dulikiaa— Oft before a word be sold ! Why shosld milt sometimes. repel us ? Bostic eyes tars oar ['.lisp mold 1 What is that which commie tell es, " Al/that glitters to sot geld?" Oh -no feature, plain or striking, But a power we cannot sham, Prompts oar liking. or d;dlkisg, Ere hath began'. Is it ioatioct-or some spirit Whish protects u. awl coatroula Every impalas we ishent By sante empathy d souls? 1s it i.stioctl-is it nature? Or some freak, or fault of chance, Which oar 11ktgqg-.or disliking - Limits to a shock glance 1 Like proseatimest of danger, Though the sky no shadow Mugs ; Or that inner sense, still stranger, Of ..seeo-ooutter'd things! 15 it -oh, can oo one tell me, No one *how su(fiekst move Why our Gkiag,-sod dielikinga— Have.their own iastieetive laws ? PUZZLE. -Is reply to the poxale in the last Atrial, a lady is Gadericb has sent the fol law, ins :- Oh may these hearts by lave en ted, Aad Mingled iota me, Sull keep these vow• se Madly plighted, Asd dream .f them atone, A.J tray ow love shim ea for ever. bike be sodyug ray, Which grief or dark midortese neer Hath power se chase away. F M. B. AGRICULTURE. LABOR WEL L APPLIED 1S'PRODUC- TIVE OF PROFIT. -As intelligent writer ,n the Genesee Farmer, ender the above head, makes the fotlewiog judieioaa remarks : Farmers Mould e'er tray in mind that •• well directed %oboe " will tosure its reward. Of all timers of men, there ii 000e mom whom tbie troth moods to be esforeed mere thaw the farmer. How teawy of elf f•rme U are year alter year tali.' en, .1 with their business oo as immense estate, and a1 the close of rhe year abs tie -coasts are sliest balanced, and again the ease toil and vexation mut be renewed ! If rightly -d reei.d efforts bad bees pat tori►, es man teed farmed the■ coald be dose to perfec- tion, what • saving of labor, what an to -creme of profit, what a reward re every point .(view, would be received! In travelling through the best farming distriet.-ef the country, we often 6ad Illustration. of chis troth most striking. 1 have is my rye • Immo( medium size, which, a few years Mace. was sterilise but neat sad is order. and which messed indications that labor had vet been " well applied." list e change hae come over this seeme. A new otea- piat takes possewioo, fined in his principles - determined that he would carry out this great maxim, oat which depends the prosperity and ewer dibo farmer, that ' • What is worth do- ing, Is werddoing well." • Now, how coos the farm begioa'0'assume • new sepeorasiee ! the fences are repaired, the land Is drained where needed, :he baildiogs ere neatly repaired ander. ranged : manures are obts;ned best suited to the soil, aid cropo,whieb are adapted to this region ; • sew sod improved stock of cattle. sheep. wad t wine are .ecered, and is ebert everything char- aeteiistic of the good fanner a?peare year titer year. soder the direction ofhim who knows how -to apply labor.. Lamed of baying, at ,he end of the the year, to resort to loam to make sp the deficiencies, ibis same farm yields a return that gksddesa the heart e( the farmer. As years roll a, each saceeedieg.n. finds a larger balance to later of well -directed labor : sad now, to addi- tion to the ondioary appendages of • farm, {here is reared, oat of the profits of this well regulated concern, a neat and tasty cottage, in the midst of aheabitery abs mo.tessty and luxuriant -all the work of bins who marred with the determin- istic)* to do all deep well. And thio is cot all: as the well -re -guided expense book Is b.lsaced, *profit which world glydden even the beats of will hate the manure remain under it for soros of our bankers on the capital invested, is several weeks furois.ing litter to it daily.- foand o• hand, to be applied as may best con- This plan a vary imitable to our climate- dac* to the comfort sed welfare of an interesties so far as the saying of liquid manure. - family. There use complaint of means seas- Warm stable*, with a box for each ■rfimat eats tib ebdarea. They are brong►t up utast'- of three years old and upwards, would, we ally to appreciate the maxim that "What is nave do doubt, pay the farmer fur the extra worth dolor, is worth doing well," sod their edeatioa prepare* them to carry eat in all the expanse. Any retest will do better and voted scene. of this lies this all-impor'aot bus thrive better loose in a *tall, than tied and tee butt pastime) teeth, confined i0 one position.-dlgei. Journal. Less' thee erg. epee rhe fames who read this pese-sad I as glad to know they are ma- THE GRAND DUKE AND THE JEW. ay, assets the meet iat0Aigeat is oar had -to pat is pnftke, H they hive ase already dose so, de maple bat risers' seethed eif ppm labor, shish bii.o with it the sen ebeed..t reward, dead wittiest which ties will is vale straggle e*, nese esserisg the sad of their 1.il. Order is (•oeme' fire law, sad let tt be Teem te svery deity sleds. to yes farm. Remember yen beige. te • oak preemies, and ono Set is dev- ised is exert a nights Islamise es tie depilates' q! s weed As ore are. thee, set the Ara$i- me fusee seep •s that mane •' All things re- lates to my isms shell he well data,"-reast se wage shell be eddeetekee thea cgs M thew deme, --wad semi they will be feted te emery thea ex- alted polities that will sees dear ielleeame ate he felt she week' ow. Rarely it *agent 4m se. assert leery epee 16**okt/ho med, the Stet. Igsat. she Ami-w'Mlia g Amsinm homes fee. t►ar esessesaiMia ie sweep er• peleotply thea mow oat a 51espeete0 relleMiea, commend itself to every ng►t-ttaiaded',Bemisg PNa. Eco.oercar. Mone or Pcrot.0 Sroci -Far- mers who have but few animals, say two or three cows, a yoke of cattle, or • pair of horses, wbt Cid ti greatly for their interest to cut their corn- stalks, saw, and eves hay, when it bears • bigh pejee. tib hen this is dose, pat the cut (odder in to corks et -suitable diamagnets, take hot water, to proles, the heat, and salt it at the rate of two Quarts to the barrel. All know that brine can be kept hot looser than fresh water. Poor this spot the cut folder, as fiat as pomeible, in order to preyeat the escape of heat, cover the head of the cask close with a blanket, or anything con - veiniest which wilt keen in the steam, and let it s,,.d half a day, or looger, when it wiftb.lowed ioterably well cooked. Now pace it 10 troughs for the stack ; and if you have a little meal or bran to sprinkle over il, yuan aoirnals will relish tl� feed -so much the better, and it will do them more good. Corn -stalks, straw, ted coarse bay. site worth teem. se much for toed, waren thus prepared, than if thrown out neither cut nor steamed. \Ve give the above from experience, having bees to the habit of iel;owisg the practice tor year,. Farmers labor diligently dories spring, sum- mer, sed tarsen, to raise end harvest fodder, then allow a targe portion to be wasted from sheer'tegligeace. Winter is their leisure time, and they should endeavor, at sera, extra.pains, to sc000mise the food they .have worked to hard to procure. Maebiaes for cutting stadia. straw, sad hay, have bees mash beproved and multi- pled witbis a few years past. and sae now be bad at low prices. It is econorriieal to power them, tied no farmer should be w;thout at lent oat oa ii $ premier Agrieu'turist. Manure is of great . . to the profitable crltivation of a farm-ndeeJ no farm can be long cultivated to advange that has sot manure applied to supply the ingre- dients taken from the soil by trope. Every farmer may not have it in hie power to ap- ply a sufficiency of farm yard manure to keep his land in condition, but there is means of greatly augmenting thegnantity of manure, by mixing that of the farm -yard with other substance., such as bo j or moss, the cleaning from drains -and in fact any waits earth. The moss sho'ild be ezposed to the air for some time before mixing with the dun'., and when mixed, it `abould be suffered to remain for some time to ferment before applying it to the sol. Turning over the heap 'after mixing, once or twice thiatproves the manure very coos.Jerably.-. dors mixes better with dung than clay will, and as sooner fit for use. Mose, clay and time, will, without any dung, make at good dressing (or tar.d, by mixing and turn- ing over the heap several times. It„should not be applied to the moll, however, until all the substances aro thoroughly mixed and. Incorporated with each other. 1t 1. a very good plan to cover the fart.. -yard with moss, if to be had coasenseotly, after the matinee is removed in the spring. Exposure too -the sun and sir, and the treading of cattle upon it, improves it very much for memo with manure or with clay -and if lime wag n!.xed with it, while remaining in thio *•ate, eo mutt, the better. There is abundarcc of moss to be had in Canada, but we are sorry to say it is not made much use of for ma• pare, although, wo believe, no .ubetaace in our power to obtain so cheaply, could be more advantageously jpsployed for tho lure proaement of nut soil, bath heavy clay, and sandy soil. Moss, mixed won either of these, has a tory beneficial effect. It opens the heavy clay, and it increases the fertility of the .and. Compost, ma proper state of preparation, 40 one d the beet ap- plications as a top -dressing for meadow or grans -but of course its value will depend upon the materials laanagcment of the compost before it is made nee of as top- dreseirg. in Canada, we think that in win- ter the liquid manure can be best preserved by litter's( the animals with strew sbuo- dastiv-or by box -feeding where the animal . •--s retire dur 11j which. stab the charaeteti.tie stress of weather. This step l ewe' had frsska.as of W £oghsh,nao, he toll the cau e w repent. Titea.a hitherto present. atraager who he was, where from, led ed • smooth surface; aot a breath of wind whither he was gotag. 'fbe ether, in the was felt, and the stars share out brightly. most friesd!y manner, invited him to sham A few cL.r,du began to appear nn the hen. the hospitalities of his hn..se, till inch a ton; and the beat begin thrive and fail with WWI air be fond it eonrenienf to resume the heating oe the sea. Undn••amfin•• his journey -adding, with s smile, that it What these piens portended, we immediate. wasnot improbable but be might visit the ly polled for the shore; bit had .earcely Crimea himself in the courtfe of that Jeer, altered our course when the sitars ,li.appear. when, perhaps, he might require a similar eJ, a trcmen,:oue noire struck upon nor ea•. return. The invitation was accepted, sad from seaward, and the oto -to 11'1• npnn ate. he was conducted to a splendid mansion, in the impenetrable nb•r•ir:ty of the newt,f elegant without, and rich -and commodious not a trace r f land could be discor•e•ed; but toasts. UuLauoded liberality oo the pert we continued to ply our oars, white each of the Pole, produced unbounded cesficient* succeeding billow threatened irnmalato de. onthe part of the Englishman. The other etruction. had a small box of j-'wels of great salve, The horrors of our Outline increases'; whirh he had carried about hie perenn from the man nn the look -not called veil that he the time of hie leaving h•me-finding that .sw breakers ahead in everydircction; and made of conveyance both h,zardous and is• eatw nom -tired to he nett to hnpe•sible.- convenient ins town, he regneeted hie me- My erc.a• of Seotti.h Islanders, however. ni6cent host to el peek it in a place of .ecu• continued their pa'nf.:l exertions without rity till ho should be ready to co away.- evincing by a murmnr the apprehensions At the ezpirelien of three Jaye he prepared they 'nest have felt. The miens was now for his departure, and oo asking for hie box, at hand. We approached so near to the bow was be aniseed whoa the old gentle- breaker* that it was imposeibin to avoid moa, with a roantenanee exhibiting the ot- them; and the men lay on tilde °are, ex - most surprise, replied, '1 What box' '- peeling the lost moment would. be their Why, the .mall box of jertet. which i last. in ones a situation the thesg'•t. of even the most depraved atonally carry them be. yond the limit* of time and by there,. thnoghts, 1 believe, the son' of ev.ty one was aheorbed; ret the men lost net their presence of mind.. Suddenly, the voice of ti.a lookout was beard amid the rear of the breaker*, e'Il:ng mar attention to a dark breach in the line of foam that stretched ant before us, which bo fenced to be a channel between the roes,. A few Cooperate strokes brought up to the spot; when, to our unireaka►le joy, we found it to answer the man's conjecture:. but so narrow was the passage that the oars no both sides or the beat etrnek the reek•; a minute after- ward., we found ouraelree becalmed and in safety. The boat being moored, and the men ordered to watch by turns, we ley dozen to sleep as we beet soul 1, sepper!ees. and without having te.ted fond since early daWO. -Mc Leans Tweetvir'e ]ears in tbe•II.dao*'s Bay Te, ritor.,. give you to keep for me.” " sty dear sir, you most surely he mistaken ; 1 serer, really, saw net heard of eeeb a box:' The Englishman w as petrified. After recover- ing himself a Itttle,•be requested the Pole to call bus wife,' she haring been present when he reccired it. She came, and on being questioned, answered to exact unison with her hueba .---expreued her turps', -std benevolently endeavored to persuade her distracted guest that it was a there hal- l.cinattoo: With mingled feelings of.her- ror, astonishment, and despair, he walked out of the house and went to the tavern at which he bad put up on his arrival at War- saw. There he related his mysterious sto- ry-, and learned that the iniquitous host was the richest Jew io Poland. He was advised without delay, to state the case to the Grand Duke, who fortunately happened at the time to be in Warsaw• He according- ly waited on him, and with as6ttle ceremo- ny, was admitted to the audience. He briefly laid down the ease, and Constantine "with a greedy ear devoured up hi. die - course." Constantine expressed bis apron- (Europcatl. rshment, t old him he knew the Jew, haring had extensive money transactions with him -that he had always hien reepectablc, and Sew ExrtaalTtos• TO L. PLAT*. ofnnhlemiehed character. "However," he Thom - added. "I wall use every leritimate means The 'semi-official Pntriebtattylon Thnro- to unveil the mystery." So shying, he -day that "the Government hag just decided, ini- tialled on some gentlemen who were to dine to •' sir til of Minister., that it will im- with him that day. and despatched a raw.. media,* send an expedition to La Pieta. answer with p note to the Jew regncpting it was ; r-Iitjrely stated at the Assembly hiahis s ssooce. Aaron obeyed the summons, i that the eq•ndrein would be composed of migoa no teenlleetinn of having .sect- ape or Iwo It gates sod several steamers. trait a nista . r *vela from the hands .[ this expedition watt Se pieced under the Oedemata," said the Duke. " Never, my command of Admiral Dabourjieu, who will indeed.: arise to the command full di el power., lord," was the -reply. " Strange, Ave yon trr(ertly cnnpcinu.," inning Some per+ons spoke of Admiral Lame se the Enpli•hman.." that you gave the hex at ( the man best calculated in every re.peet to stated t" "Quire eertain, my lord." Th'Nlb►tn� rreh • nrAntiatr"n to a goof termjna- addressing himself to the Jew 't Thu is . j hon, andweentirely' toners. in tit's opinion. sexy singular cave, sod 1 feet it my duty to' The effective strcneth of the trop; s to be FRANCE. • . GPO .malls. mean. to ascertain the truth -i• your wife at home 1" " Yea my lord." - Then, continued Coestantine, "here is a• sheet of paper, and here is a pen, proceed to write a note to your wife in witch terms ap 1 *ball dictate." Aaron lifted rhe pen. - "Now," said the aceond Solomon, "cum• rococo by saying, all is discovered ! There is now no resiource but to deliver up the box. 1 have owned the fact before the Grand Duke." A tremor .hooka frame of the I.raeIite, and the pen den jicd from •his fingers. But instantly recovering him- self, he exclaimed, "That is impes.ible. m�• lord. That woad be d -redly implicatme A somatic" Or RBAL UV$, The following singular story was current among the English residents in St. Peter*. burgh, at the eoro.utioo of the preemie Emperor of Resets. le tete wtfy pert of the year 1838, an tartish eseetkmaa, frown Acbmereh, is the Crimea, Aerie( *ecaaise to go to France sae ►sanest M empnrteece, dit..t.d his coarse' by the way er Warsaw, to Palmed. Abet an boor alter bis arrival Is that city, he omitted the tavern ie which be bad takes rf(reebewat, to tabs • walk through the streets. WNI. saeee,rieg Is fleet of sae of the public buildings, he met with as elderly gentleman of a grave septet ata4 esestsaa. ileseraer. Ager meatery e"- ebtet.e of Tec Me If dteftlW myself." " i give you my word of honor." raid Conetaotioe, "in presence of every one in the room, that what you write shah nev- er be used as an isstruorent against you, farther than the effect it prodoees op your wife. 1f you are innocent you have noth- ing to fear -but if you persist in not wri- tiog it, 1 will hold it as a proof of your guilt. With a trembling hand, the terrified Jew wrote nut the note, folded it up, and, as ho was rewired, sealed it with hie owe, signet. Two racers were d..patehed with it to his hoose, sod wheel Sarah glanced direr it. contents, the swooned and sunk to the ground. The hex was delivered rap and restored to the owner -end the Jew e. tier- ed the him villainy deserved. - He was .est to Siberia. iHAIRBREADTH ESCAPE After mentors emoting my ertors n1 1 loft Mr. rase Frland.oa with two go to share tats soli- tude. sad embed the ass without experhee- tsg say adveetere we►th settee. Proceed - tag along the eemt. I was iadoeed one fattens,events( by the fattesg appearance of the weather to tallseapt the passage of a skip liar; Which bete( aotiasyliahed. then wr little dagger of being delayed afterward* 1y tient will be 2.000 men, under the immcJi- atecnromand of Col .Lannes de Mentabclta of the 7th Cha•seurs. The members of the Committee who examined the questioe of La Plata have received an aseurance that the expedition will be promptly prepared• and despatched ase soon as pos.ibls." Thte •taternent hoe laden denied, but It prem• tele notwttbetanding. T PlasseC(TI0`i mane Ness _es PARI?.- The editor of the Rrforme eas convicted l'hur.day, before the Court of Aspire at Parte, for having puhltehod a seditious Ii�el and was sentenced to three months Unpinsor.meof, and to pay a fine of 9.0001. 'rhe Presse was erized on Naturally, for hiving republished a hhet for which the Re/'nr*te had been condemned. This con- duct was the more culpable from the declar- ation of the Presse, that it republished the libel in order that the public might judge of the jnatice or injustice of the sentence on the Reforms*. rt'i'en the Kier and the ministry aro deli- 1,, Mr. Blithtee riewenf frstrtrbi hf►u, a t oirelr ...Wed. in! that the King wit( take least wise teer;l, 3. et.;jJs ►tie' ,ail' •.1 'rho the oath to the constttutiun.-up;'rannn.OMl, Nr, J$ ht deer* not attri- HA!►1B(;R(i. Jan. 8.—Ther rorration bate fri•h ssuQerirg to I c ,'c:•p!r M ing to be n/ Celli.. racy, 'fleet, err Ariel of the taxa♦ (dee Sieh•ziger (7•'11e:rime) du- nos behind England le aerieutemAi and . cussed, ►eelerdar, the sketeh for a new J. a riot detein;o'nont, in- enn•'itut.onelex• eweetautyne, es drawn np by the enm'n'It.e perienee and �eI.,ioua rhae'e, Mr. Brig t of nate, and riieetwl it be a lane maj'ety so doubt attr.hu'es to 000 itlaftt- belsR 138 to 111. The Moate will, hewcvor en ntore renintc than the other (rot$ the Euro - nn w it'd it, rer,d,ne the pr.ja'et to Ilse entre,- ,.An ren're•• .•f rdeeallen, of' en a`•hdR- ratrnn of the IND and t''.. to the enneell►. „int, of roopn!etion, e, d of cernnterci .- in which the latar r have peat. sed antes ; \\'h1t ha. net F.n}lend !earned fr,►h I1o)- hot sin have the aldermen of ell the trades, 'and and hong dente.-, ar d ..t a, time ,rhe n soilIbev exerr•re a wrest deal of irfl tense it was keeping Ireland "t der hi force if en all the freeholder* befnneine to choir are,. a041'y rigour' o' ntq-it'..e., law.• 1-- rerpectjd e (rodeo. Should the,', theref••re,- Whilst deanlnpiwg he ox -n trr.d •m, cow. ho in favorer of the senate'* mutt,.. it sr i'1 ei-t°tinp. and romrn,,,T;e , p'n•peftt;•, Lel. be carried in "etre of rho npn••sirrnn of it.e I Nn,! keit Ireland is a at .se of sorrame. ruld ane;eats *rad starrimer( * (rhe former *ye t err of 1 tits^. ,.chert b.. ft war Qaxoa and �- (he'arter, troth bean: agrn port of rho Itft- 1,pd Ceit, bol ►.cans. 11 was more pope - 11 is ewit.is that the i'rn•.tn* tro .r.. wit: leu"e rowerfid. and • rich, Haying Thee BERLIN Jan 4. -Matters here remain in the game position as yesterday : the resig- na'rne M the ministers had not been accep- ted at sewn today, and en ministerial cir- cles a •ettl,meaa of the differences was capsulated probable. Roth thcC'iambere resumed their mutters; their proceedings were without any inter- est and merely referred to petition.. They will meet again on Monday. Nearly all the ministry were prevent to -day. The 8se.am committee have nob:joshed their menet en the bodges for 1849 and 1860. it mutes es little novelty. According to a ion is the Coohtilseiowed ('.rresypooa4ea1, Saxony has protested against the Erfo h palm/et-- The Chambre of Saxony re most favour- ably inclined towards the " Three King.' Lea(ee," sad may therefore most probably � 'upset their speedy desolation. The pre - settee of the Asatrua troops on the Berke.- ' wan irentier of Saxoey admits of little doubt that this will be the course pumped by tits gIfnverweteet, and that the interven- tion of Asatr* r4 al hand. 11.8. Tr/06W fo dosser my letter, 1 late jtlel111t AI abet tittledilbreeees be - bet Lave no before ti,ern . tff•rerees are krr.t heaved f,ieelbly tan er thn'eteelatide settled ; indeed, the ee4'a c wnuhl not he!itnd her in riv'.tzation, E:rglatlel, whits - wish it : bot whether they will err 'ben 'e ever she made any greet ter in opisiee Or ettfisttter,oeation. They area heavy cha►r'-' in pili tr. in•isted d.n draping Irritant with on nor city budget.her, •and forcing Iecijn,! to adopt the mines. The Prusetan soldier•, who brhes.it very I F.nglaed was ripe fo the reformation in the well until now, ha.. been rr rr riotnoa re- l .txteenth century : Ireland was not • bat ceetiy, and have etrieck sad It -model( piste i England went to work with cannon and sa- tel persons in the street. in[• 11,e evert- lire In make her : and bovine only partially tor. Last att!ht dome u1 nor eeldter. same' .ncepedc.!, under ('rnmwe'I and Wrf:iirn. into enafaet with them, and es t a thra.h- Atte .nikily eondemncd the Pleb to a rente- ice. The Promises were, l.nw•r.r, ants- ry of secs! and pohtital lle!otiam ire'aa f red by the entree,. patrol.. Theile who endured up to three quarter? of a century eoninv tted d:aturbonrce a few n1ehei *CO. ; ago- And, now, forsooth, because lreiatt,l and erre arrested, have h..n .evrrcly DIM- to not on a per 'vi•h ore, doe. oat lore op. uhae br their officer., and the order net tin! eiympathise with u.. or adopt our ideas on visit public -houses, given tong since, wa• industry and on politic', she is C. !t, 10. our renewed. i inferior. We Saxons are " bete lerd'ti," je A •.harp front pet in seam the nicht he fore 1.01, ani the Elbe is twain ot•trnered. Two (lull /reamer., however. cot rap the F.lbe yesterday, as far so Glnck.todt, bet the London eteemer, with the made, did not leach further that Ceekahaven. LOi.A MOiTge AND nwa Hir,IA:rD.-1t 1s tested that Mr. Heald hae arrived in Lon- don. The following aeconnt of the con- tinued misunderstanding of this gentlemen and his fair companion ie given in a letter front Cadiz, dated December 27. {It will be'seeh that it differs somewhat from the statement given in our French Newe]; " Lola Montes and Mr. Heald have been here for the last ted days. They came from Barcelona. She in much altered, and not ern good-looking as when here in 1:12. Her temper ie not at all improved, and her delight peons to be to keep Heald in the greatest terror and dread of her. Wild made' hii cecape with his English 'servant from thehotel Ismenez (where they were slaying on Christmas morning,) and is pup - 'poised to have gone to Gibraltar. Lela was forioup. She went in a French. .teams Mr. Carlisle arrange• whirs are' blacks. Yr is the persons who preach pinch do; - 'mos a. thi-, who can never parity Ireland. And when these persons actually reereeent the ideas of the governmept, and perform the (unctions of their pnittiril organ, is it a wonder that the Whig• are unpopular in Ireland Mr. Bright stands upas the antago- nist of much mistaken ''rad degrading theri- Ties. Ile declare. the ills and the back- wardness of Ireland to be owing to pest misrule and to prevent persistance in the cr necquenee and dregs of that misrule, in the tnsjatenance of agrarian 'accedence and m000po'y after political privileges Sane been abolished. Instead of this phi!osopy of Mr. Bright's adding inveteracy or inettl- ling disaffection into the Irieh beers. i', on the contrary. extracts from Eeglish pride its ill-founded sense of superiority, and from Irish recrimination its natural and indelible hitterness. 'lie point. to Englishmen be* they can repair, to !nehmen how they Way forget. Ho indicates to English statesmen 'remedies and measures, of whose worth and fleeessite they may not be ignorant, but which they are totally unequal to perform end ,npble to carry, uolees suet men as Mr. Br.ght pway anJ turn the popular mind of England 10 their support. in the otter incapacity of our aristocratic legislature to rata le that evening with hcr'two 'friend., foreign- w ' p Irieh distress, or to eonsest te4 IS the abanwdoith r.meet of thnpe ricilewea and ere, who are in her parts, to Alger a, and that menopnly from which these sufferings sent i'meorz. Another man, by land; so that +erring, the only hope for Ireland is in po o - if Iieald dot'.` tint ,ucceed in getting on. lar agitation in Ireland, managed as it has board the Paclio, she hopes to catch him.- been of late by the puerile and the selfish, It is reported on good authority to -.'ay that turns inevitably against the popular cause. Heald' has embarked this morning on heard eanse. And therefore it 1. that a pr.. the Parha, and he will now be enabled t Mica! agitation in England for Ireland reach England in safety, and no doubt feel would be one of the greatest of ble,- gratc•ful to his sato; for all sSa has done for sings to both, would be a bond of peace, am." and good feeling, and mutual true* between them, and would do more for the great 'ask IRELAND. -Tho retirement, or mens- of pacification and redemption titan any red re•iremen', of Mr, John OCnnme!I, fere the duties of politically) prieeerihing for lie. amount or score of ministerial nostrums, tan! and the entrance of 11r. John bright . timidly cooceired, grudging held forth, sad, npnn that task, are indicative of a change of as is era the case, in the end, mercilessly scene and of actf in, and even of the drama • and woetonly stifled -Leedom Daily ti s persona in the tragi -comedy of Irish -Aha tory. 1 he farce of empty agitation, as a goiiree of private revenue 01' partv.specula- tinn, is lo•t in the folds of the falling cur- t•jn M r Bn - - Fyne the Birmingham Journal. gots laowertul snntogny tell. M R. GEORGE DAWSON'S LECTURE. a tale of powtiie mefvrtune, act prone/ice a remedy of practical meantime. are.. On Out evening of Toe,dat Tact Mr. Geo. The land, Pays Mr. Br gh', i• the or le tin- Howson. M. A.. delivered a lecture in the do•trr, atmnst t'•e no!.' capital, certainly -g,.n 11.11, nn "Social Ree rmation, tee the .ole rew,uree of the Iri.hmon. Beat the Apostles and Syatme, ' at Vie request of land has been for centuries mnnnpnlieed by the Arpnniatinn for the D of another and a conquering race, who have Politest Knowledge. There was • good built political power upon its monopoly. attendance. Alderman Filmer occupied and derived wealth from its enatded natural the ehsir. (ort city -unaided by more than tiro taboo. Mr. Dawson, who wart !teeny applauded and the manure heap of the pea•ent. 'lad minor, enmmeneed his predilection. by teen what wee taken from the field. oflre- ".feting the reason why be had been mdoeed lend bete returned to it, either in the shape to tate np that pnhject. Oes who was col 01111(.7a:7. °Br oamt 1nn1..i.p, riot pewteoutorld sha. hberoovgnht- .rpnma, paonstlewoitf . emthixeerd pnutpiawhpitmh onecubnenn r,un we. pant o1 -the Irl,h and have both an interest most likely toiso them imparted 0041114:10- m exhnu.ting it, nod with it Iseggartn mg personal thempelae t ration; end amongst the pnal resent►. he had was not only the moappreheneion Give the rolt;na'or of the Soil a perma• of 'bees thing. in E.nzited, but the amount nen' interest 14 It, a NI,. 11.7gg'ii'. sample of a►nee they received. Ile hod always t advice, which he wnnhl 1. in yhnee erre,'- liking for 'homed things. In them were (0415 w•it'* which the erste ,.f law an' ern elw.Is the gtrmp of the future in the his- pery in that.„retry permits. Mr. Bright tory of the world. Immediately all slew as fully Impressed aii any see. hew much of pnnke well of a doctrine it sunk in the Irish Ill is dap in moral and political canoes, •hwsth s,f pentad r. nrehnd,.iy. and teepee - still docile but lightly teal generally upas ,abthtr. It mirist ll.o ('onserrarivice these, dtrrehng tio letento.n and the Her of tmesere, hot rnold yield tin help to theirs gies (Ohio Angle In.h ai,.l,c:,ee 10 the, re who torte -d eberr face* to the fetor.. In moval of palpable wrnn_. •/11 phy.ieel oh- plain lanyea!n 1 meshes in England ese,at ltrtteime in the way of the eoentry's pros- one Ishii heel a system of /also sad uorhri.- penty. Whilst srelt'ig 1e iii'rndece this Ilea ew.e.pdt►etr., •nd held abominable Dew sedeof Irma aptence. amt In tura its np'Inwea a• In the demonise of m•rnage.- rrsoowtesl .rest the,estrmenla: res the reef. ('noenttee.m .want hum who had nothing Mr. Bright is V•adkl with reproach that tr,,n! In brier about a reramble in wit ch he eas made nn woa,frnts.d•scorery. it is, ..' might nlps*th enmeshing from hon who indeed, to be Israelite' that the Pelves of het. B.vend that the kn. wiedge .f Est, l polities is not that or methane., or elemis- laud tegOell.d not. In beepong, tip tit try, 1443 wnn'►w,. IOhat sta►r.man'aan able of 1h'sr. sya'ew•e tae frauds of order' i5,ewt.r t Whores T rhe polar+eel world r. sad property were ant clow, and mea•• per - the steam, ear the .ren road, or the gen-cot- Ocularly rine. the Ise' French Revolution; Inn of our ill 1 What did Pett invent, of bot 'hat rprolet,nn wee Dol eo much a which bee clelJres Dight be pried 1 Fax political n aerial ernes. Tu break spoke much this wag eiog•rmnt, (ore,ble. 1 b- down these I.aperehenru..• was another oral, and I rap, bol what 111J he cherorer t- perioral res no why he h chosen the eab- What did eel, what he. Cobden invented t lee,. Ile •sold trace then -for his Ial,St ' Ilse, not eh picked np Mese, lake pebble. wee rot to plead for it -the pedigr.I of ' relhnR ear lbw cursor of Irl., wh rh they mewl reform, and what were els heresies/ have polished. and see, and made thtrer owe chant .. le England the greet properly and 'denoted theasedee. with I Rot for and .oral atrestinns hail net reee.v d e.eh nrtgtnah(y of , iedevllearahk 0* it 'Hannon as w ether tante. (h• of there tor poets, we have heard that it reseo.s vise that many men had preperor was regohwd of politician,.fa siege... snot her was *MK that they *e 1 f1 there lie Mathis/ trtaereadentalt ids slash net 7 new a (bird was that pr