HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1850-06-06, Page 1la 7
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VOLUME Ill.
SCOTLAND.
Arrasmca Sewat -Sill is in costew-
ptetios to ssubbeh Apprentice Schools in
Dlugow, coo the plan which has been adopt -
al with groat success in Edinburgh. The
object of these School* to to provide young
nee who me employed eluting ut day in
teaks, with the moans u( mdocatton suited
to their 'circumstances- Apprentice lads
wheel, early education bas. been neglected,
Eeeerally *risme a dllhke to attend ending
ry evening schools. and to be pl.e.J on the
sumo form with children. la IiJraburgh the
schools may be coneiJ.reJ as already self -
situp vntng, it beteg on put of the plan to
afurd gratuitous iostrucLen. Th* whole
e ight schools in Ehnhorgb cost the Aseo-
elatfon last year only £2d6. Tb. A.soeta
lies has received the gratuitous use of clase-
roo es from the Bata►Gal ted Church, the
Free Chargqh, the Governors of llertot's
11 epital, end the Lancutenao school. .l
f•W useless *ince, a mullet of gentlemen
who take an int in the education of
the was held in the Religious lean -
Wine Rooms, far the purpn•e of consider-
ing the property of eitabLsbtng an aaoet•
altos for promoting education among the
workmen and seventies' of Glasgow. R.
$w.rd. Lie. was called to the chair, and
bnefir .xplaiaed tie ohj•eets of the meeting.
Mr. Guild, who had been connected w,th a
stwilu essnciatioo in Ellnbergh, gave a
miry eneaoregicg account of the institution
aeJ progress of mete' closer, at a stosil
fee (1s. per month), to which workinee and
from 1111 veus rear,•( ate sad
•pp
upwards, were taegbt reading and writing,
Slee.. apart from you: permits, which bad
flees takes advantage of by no fewer than
0110 permute durteg t' a pa.t year in that
etty. Mr. B:eckte, sea. Sir. M Greeer,
Me. M•arneoa, 6a.1 other', addressed the
01811.11111. end • pr.v.noa.l committee was
appnisaod to get ep a pubighnieeting on an
earl( Iy, fee the perposeilf7 bringing the
subject men lolly before employers and
•tbers, s.1 of, Cannier the proposed asroct-
altos.
lrrgos. a .Vuomea., CaRooea(s
Chard Yuri.—The gray -rand, in which;
are interred the remain. of Duga*l AWort,
Adam Smith, Robert Foetuses, tied other
eminent Seotehrw.n, and which has lost
been left is a disgraceful state, has lately
bees much improved. The monument
erose •reeled hy Robert Berne to hi. tl-
starrel precursor, Robert Pereuson, which -
was sinking is the ground and tumbling to
deca►, hu been raised on a new and higher
pedestal, the surface p lashed, and the tet-
ters deepesed. The poet's grave ht. been
newly covered with turf, and the whole will
be Immediately closed within• • neat iron
(tame with pillars Mid chain. A gravel
walk hes ban mak leading to this most
interesting mostment, on which, is ad•li-
tion to tk• well known lines, there is en-
graved the fo:hieing inscription •—"qty
'peed grant of 'be mangers to Robert
Runs. who erected this stone, the' burial
place is to mule for ever sacred to the
memory of Robert Fergu.no.e The inlets.
tion of Biros, which hid nearly been frus-
trated by negieei Ned d•'uy, has now been
carried out by the enbeenptinns and eter-
tteee of a few a fewer' of genr'ts ; an 1 in
co...geese' of the hkstantial manner in I
which the work It.. been ecce itej, it mar
fairly be expected that foreentones to come
the lovers of Sentieh poetry will have an
• peertbnity of finding the spot where
••
This simple armee directs pale Amities way,
To peer her ..news o'er km pest's dome'
Gass. Rata.w•r Buses.—The Prussian
Misstate,' of trade end Public Works has
levied a public settee, mummer the eogi-
seers of all nations to send in plane of a
fixed bridge at Cologne. to unite the lines
of railway between Beleiurt mod Prance
wtth the great German lino In Vienna.—
Sioc• the time the Runans possessed these
provinces no German government has yet
been ibis to build • ■'o . or other 6xe.1
bridge over the Rhine, and this modern
railway traffic bu to rr..s• the stream by.a
eoatnva.ee they has sot been improved for
centuries. The .a nhster states the condi-
ttoss to he fulfilled to • the construction.—
The river (tom bank to hank is 1475 feet
wide; this space meet be crossed by a
bodge'.anag three opening.; the piers are
to occupy itl all not more than 75 feet, and
mist Nes firmly built ss to stud the pr*•
sere of the fields of ice that descend the
' trust en the bresk•up of great frowte.—
The brid=e meet support a tramway for
leaded railway waggons, a roadway for
ordinary carriages, sed footpaths. Leate-
motivev will not pass it, nor cube -ekes
trains. and passengers will be token across
front terminus to tummies. The communi-
cation therefore well still be imperfect, bet
ft 1. neeee.ary to obtain a certain height
above tee water to meet the immense nee
.(the river in floods, and, as Elis termini on
the N"psetiw banks are on a low level. lh•
sseeet from them to the roadway of the
bridge *111 be too short and steep Inc loco-
metiews. The bridge eresaes the river
feem eke forth side of the Cologne and
Min4ou station at Dula, in nearly a straight
fine, draws towards the ebnirof the cathe-
dral twerediat.l) opposite. To the design
News sty atloe is to be paid to this eircum-
geseeet,fn order that the bridge it exterior
ewer easy he worthy its Ito•itien. The
beetle set te *treed 1,100 000 thither. —
'Me beet plan will ree.lee a prise of 330
reedbriebe tree; the second beet, 1$5. All
the glansereafat V tient ar by August,
°wasure Yantis IR Vem Dims",
IMb1►-441st weak T writ to see two of the
't Set MM iA the world, If sot the largest
• eee0ws► bees siesvered. They were
*Mei a Military tit' to the Northwest
e ter No bleb of !genet Wslling•
dhd iitl rMt tern liars. eetbd Swamp
tlleeen OEM tees irersleg, the *the.
te; the I.ttsrtBgt�iW to the breach
pru.bs
Asst delteeelletlipeee the top wee
• ohs WINS 144 Alkk j-f.er feet, or
•IIMdYit leen; ot tint "Oh the Ink It meet
•ha1lm.s' {00 feet.--.
41111 MI •free' MAebs d the bar,
turd ISM IIM erels Reit bane*. f►e os.
lis.aa to Illretelett,wRh die beastee.., 440
"Pi 741.4411,11.1? -40.111/1,4e
I I II.111 I 11 nfl M t e t
,i
" THE GREATEST POSSIBLE GOOD TO THE GREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER.
GODERICH, COUNTY OF HURON, (C. W.) THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1850.
eigerosely, withered Abe "lightest symptom
of decay, and looks like • lags church
tower among the puny frau-trecs. It
n ieaonree, at three feet from the ground,
109 feet is rireumfereore, •t the ground,
150 feet ! We hail no means of auertain-
int its Ieieht. (which, however, must be
centimes.) from the density of the forest.—
' anot',e►snt forte yids from tt.
and at three feet it was Bitty feet rued:
and at 130 feet, where tete Arai branch be-
gan, we judged it In be 40 feet; tins was a
noble eelumn indeed, and sound as a nut1 am sure that witlitn a mile there are at
least 100 growing freer, 40 (eel in eireum
serene..—Leifer from Rep. T. Ewing of
H,Aart Town.
l..rostno tR Tina PotnT.—Bard Mr.
C—, a Presbyterian minister of some
notoriety, 1 never laughed in the pulpit only
nn one occosio't, and that came near pro-
curing rev dumireal from tb• seisistry.
About nos of the first di•courees i was
called to deliver, •ubseque•t to my ordina-
tion, after reading my teat and opewee my
• u tjeet, my imitation wee directed to a
young man with a very Popish dress, sod •
Lead of exceedingly red hair. la a slip ire
msdta'ely beb+ed tYa young g..tlemaa sal
an urchin. *be meet bate hoes .aged es to
1 kis devil'ry by the evil one himself for I do
not creme ve the youngster thought of the
jest he was playing et up the 'prig darty
in frost of him. The boy held lets fore
Anger in the hair of the ,onus worn, about
as long as a blacksmith would a nail rod to
the fire is beat, and then on hie knee, Som
mental puled'sg ba finger in imitate." of a
.mith snaking a nal. The whole thong was
•
se ludterno. that I laughed, the only time
that I ewer d:egrsced the pulpit with any-
t►tng like mirth.
tVben Jade, Peters el Pennsylvania, wee
Speaker r:f the Hour o1 Assembly, one of
the metnters, increasing the roots, incised
on the e.rpet and fell. The hoses bunt
into laughter, while the J,dee with the cat
most gravity cried, 'order, oder, guile.
men, a member is en /heftier.
Ant:cran Dto+err.—The best proof of
a vulgar man is to be found in the gnastity
of dignity that he wraps himself np in• 1s
the mentors of such moo. the only way to
set a proper value on yourself is to treat
with cootempt every body else. Sub men
are generally rich and vert trimmest. The
°largest feeling' min weever knew, was s
swelling blockhead, who imegttte•I that the
tragedy of Hamlet w written by Damon
and Pythias, and who eouldi t tea, • Minot ,
conptlting his rade wenn whether Shalt ,
spears was the author of Macbeth, or Mae-
beth•the author of Shak•peare. As a gen
eral thing. your digoifed men are ;seat
. They keep at a distance that their
neighbors may not discover what counter
festa they are. Acmes the street, s g.1 ;
Tame watch appears to he bullies. Men
are I:kn ships—the more thew momta;n, the
lower they carry their head,"
CALIFORNIA ST•TR Pat,Tttto. kc.—In a;
private letter from • Califorsu Correspond-
ent, (Mr. Myrick.) it re stated that the
eovrrsment of Celdoraia pay. $7,50 Po'
tMosand ems for comprttuon, end $7,50
oar token fur Press Work. Journeymen
Prmler's wares are from 60 to $75 per
week, std $1,50 per hour for overwork. A
good printer, be says, can clear over $100
per week, but at present prices he can do
I laetter in the mines. In speaking of the
begrslatore he says, it a enmity made up
of new men, who know little about the
forms of legislation; but still they are eery
I orderly and attend to their duties with pre-
' motness. California to probably whit end
a was a no -party rues that osallod the
Loco(ucos to get tip. a"seedeeeythis year.
America• Citizen.
There Is a glare dont worldly success
which is very apt to tussle men's eyse.—
Whee we see a ren tuning in the world;
thriving is business; successful in his opera-
latinos; if he be a man oat of our ewe litre,
who does sot eowe into enmpothten with sr,
.e ea 11I make es j aloes of him, we are ton
apt to form a looliebly high opinion of ba
. sent.. W• are apt to say within our
selves, " W hat • woaMrfnl mss this mast
be, to riot se rapidly r forgetting that deet,
as1 straw, sad fettlr.re•_tbingo with neither
weight normalise in them—nee soonest and
the easiest.—Rn. If . Harr. •
A Mavens.—The Western Time" fella
• story of a "dt'tre..ed agrienherlst." A
farmer dropped is bore on Wednesday last
to pay his rest, petting on a long face to
correspond with the tutee. On entering
the booty, he told the landlord that times
being so bad, he could net raise the money
at all ; and dashing • bundle of honk notes
on the table=•There,' nerd he, ' that's all 1
can pew.' The mosey was taken up, and
counted by Mr. _-..—., the Iandlnrd, who
said, r W hm, this is twice as reach as yoo
owe r ' I'm dashed 111 ate't took it out of
the wrong pnrket !'
SNI•ar Emmett .—An F,Iitor out West
who was ser .tectal to the Ind. Legislature,
was sI) *Mame at his e•eeees, that he eaeght
hirn"et( by lire "est wf his tru•ers and tr$ed
te betel bl...t( ewe at arm's length. It is
staid Ie po.teerspt that he week' hate ie-
s.wpliM.d the fat if be burst let go to
epee es ►M hood..
BOT To ea TLsoyr.• .At ih. Cwtr.ty ad
erbreugb Alio., which el•.e1 Ott the
7 iseta.', • tittle bey, *toren years old,
s Gorge Gress, was eentooe.d to be
honed Os t►. Ilett of Jame.
A C&NferM. pap', "Oyer'—Wafer, instead
of was seowld be wood in bfl aspera' M IR
orwwieg this let►raes end OA/ tW -wax
w elts vol the letter. am 1
knoll 1. e.perstiht *5.w
Buocowe---A lot of inflows, a
dee. Imo/ the elhsr day 1s AA' is
Wee than Seer bears nMttg4. 1 sad
a wotess,
r.�
Provincial Parliament,
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY.
WEDNESDAY. Alar 22nd.
Bir A. McNAII as.rrted Met the Aoorastioe
cry was csu.ed solely by the Rebellion Loeser
11.11, which had been devised for the repress per -
put of paying rebels by an bon. esteems. who
time sat.ppiis ra him, as the bead attic Ad-
ministration, but who, in the min of Lord Sea-
ton had been called a rebel—
Mr. LAFONTAINE. '•Never."
Bir A. McNAB. Was mot a warren issued
for Mist bon. gentleman, eeh i reword of E500
for his capture. sad did not he Ay from Sheerest
to England, mid when the warrant wee sent erer
to England after him, did set he fly over to
Fence w soon as he foetid it out 7
Amidst some callosities 11r. LAFONTAINE
denied the cermet sees of Sir rtllau's as.eruo.a.
Dr. DAVIONON also said that Sir Allan ap-
peared to be to error.
Bir A. McNAII reiterated hie statenwsts, and
defied the Hou. Attor•.y General East to deny
them. They were toe tree. The hon. geode.
nitro eeseocted that rebellion, and then fled from
the country, lemma( bis (needs to manage as
well se May could. What did tether .( those
fur roe. p.tlemew whs mt a frost •( bum de,
Irate the peace of she City of Termite was
amestied by awned rebel., ad when Her Majes-
ty's reprerutauve coiled en her royal subjects to
stud be hits a the drfsee of the Zuno;ry mel
its a.uustioss 1 Where was the lion. Attor-
sey General Weft? Taking care of his books
and papers. Where was the Hon. inrpeetor
Gegen!? Sheik's. i■ him hammock. Where
wee the Hem. C.mmessio•er of Crown Leads?
Not to be foetid anywhere- And yet thew hon.
gentlemen west up to His F..c.11raey only a
tew mouths ago. and pretemdlog m merrelloor
hese for the institutions of the couture, dvieed
him to &sm.» from the commissio. of the
Pewee a number of highly .respectable magis-
trates and militia officers—men who had in 1837
turned cat Is arms astdti•en that boo. gentle•
manss from the eoary le bad agitated, merely
Steams they had aped their names to a deco -
mese expressive d their views to the altered
pate of the comer!. it was no wonder that the
:gal po..lattom sf Moutreal felt themselves in•
salted. for be Masted.. it. that they were the
meet lard body of mes ie the Primmer. (Hear,
hear, from Mr H'tacks,] for when rye• Mos -
seed of them waited os His Excelleocy we:h
• petit',., praying that Se woad est smut to
she Rebelleeu Lewes Bill, is what manner Ola
their pretties !weefved 7 Wiy, they were Is -
kneed that " it wad etcei•e hie eery best eon -
sideration.'' Was that the kind of answer to
retort.' to is.. who, in the time of trouble tied
dupe, had placed themeel•es foremost—bad
stood out i• the !root rash, and bared their
breasts in the steel l The mes who advised
that answer est opposite. He would not com-
pare the mire ,of Meetreal with them, for they
would 'offer is*sitely by the comparison; but he
weold m.a them. d they theorist they were com-
petent to *Mese His Excellency is that matter?
And before they p.* th.ie *sewer, it woad be
well for them to re..fleet that their posthu—
mous of them, se he had already mid. having
bees stia!ly togged is eoaeectiog that Re -
bellies, Was /meet limgly delicate. At • sabot -
meat Wale of the preeeedisp, the Go.eraor
wa• pelted through the streets, sod he was ex-
ceedimey army to heir it: bet be was gene eon-
6deot that a smog wi old sever have been
Meows at bum, Jim had adopted a different Ilse
of coodoct. The revolt of it was. that His Ex•
eelkr.cy shat himseif up .n his own partiedar
cell at Monklands for three mouths, teamed of
riding into town every day to p.rfom his duty.—
As a matter of coarse, his Cabinet h.d drilled
him that hie dignity was 'toothed. And finally
they removed tie Gor.r•awat to this place,
where he was very glad to ore 11, as It was so
mach nearer les own home. The hen. (entw-
ines gave • very detailed history of the manner
in which the Rebellion Lows Bill wss intro-
duced ted carried through Parliament; mid alio
alleled, but mete eoeeisely, to the Representa-
tion Bill as lest meseioe, which be mid was as
*wen attempt os the part at the Miawtry to se -
care tberneelve• pernanrutly i• office. That
was perfectly clear from the manlier is which
Mr. Coodbee, whom he believed to be more is the
ewfide•ce d the Ministry than army other matt,
had pokes of it i• his paper. Iles he would
*debts them, before they reamed the attempt. is
wait aotil they meld gel the seams et she people
at the polls.
Mr. MERRiTT had listened with week pate
to the speech of alae hem. member for Ilsme'enn;
be would have listened with pleasure had he
bees discount a pro -ties' neesurre, bat th•
tame topics which hal bun discussed for days
mod week• lest sssies, and which bed Jed to
scenes of •ioleece of which the less that war then
said the boner, he coati sot hers sauce without
psis. He should est falser the hon. member
is the enures hs hod taken. They had left the
scenes of .1.1..ee bebied them i. Lower Casa -
cis, and mow be enteruised eoa1deet a.tcips-
tines that they were about to enjoy a ensu or
mon peace sad quiet"ess than they had lately
psr.d through. T►t.ou.tr! we.id au prom
per till the frames of owiwneim whieh bad pro-
dteed these Peewee were heeled forever. It sae
improper f.r the has. tt to sweeties the
O.wusmr Gamest is t ha.ss; it was Elis
mi.ietry whetted advised them that were reepee-
eible fee the setai. h•dsutsplaioral .f: the (rev•
ere. had acted is the amasser Nah the eesslt.
eation sparred Of hiss, i• aw..tisg t. ,b. blit.
said for as 4P.6 be bad here esteemed by all
geed uea there/hem see ksgth sad tweak% el
the lead. He helmeted thee the i.dr.aety hili,
ententlastawirieg all that W bees mid ageism it,
bed eflested • pest deal ef pad: lit bad .hewn
as the peopled Cassia that they rowed the
pawns e( oaf ge►evemest,—shot the Iwpe sl
Idsists..t weld eel maerfess with Uri, richt.
W .see _..L........4 the eager of the hes. gess
ammo and the wtw►er M Renu, who hod
Base m Emghud re •ek the isnperiat authorities
to my. that the ammo., of the people d Courts
ehe•ld tele the my.dty. 1111 domed 11a1
wet heir. the domed C•ww-.L and • amy
rep Ineisriiy eases te the d.emmiwadeesetieo
the people of (Mirada to govern themselves, they
wore a million sad • half In camber and able to
manage their ossa again; they had aier eaprer
Ned their approval of i' a sob!' eteduct of the
Guenter G. acral—the brat en•.tNariossl O.,.
emote that timer Canada ..it hal. The goes•
tine had come 1.4,.,. the Ileum of Inrds, also,
sad a majority then, too, hid decided that self- .
government was Decorum for Caoads. Lord
Joho Ruswll'a speech ou the Commons ',mild
prove, of any floe doubted, that they possessed
that power. To come to the motion, then, of
the member for Norfolk. 11 the people of the
Province desired a elective Legialati•e Coun-
cil, they would have it, ■nything that they de•
aired, they could obtain; if they wished the boa.
member fur Hamilton to form a go•eromeot it
would be ee. Why thea did be sot wait pm-
titoty; his tura might cern anon, bat Dot wish
a.iserity, and ant by means.( tore' and vio-
lence in, which be would MIL No appeal be the
passions would succeed is Upper Cased', MMe
contest most be waged in a peeeeble,:aad con-
sti.stiooal A . and be decided at 'h. polls.
The people desired to ase the (/sits of this right
of eel(-goveranwot in good practical Iegislatios,
for the benefit of the country, which meld only
be effected by :he sited efforts of both
leder of the bootie. He believed thatlbey
would have no more violence is that hoose; they
would quarrel shout administrative, he dared
stay. and he had ss objrc:toes to that. bet they
would Dot do it is that bitter and •soleal manner
which had marked the deletes cm rvte.t coma -
e kes. As to the motion before them, it was Dot
the proper time to diocese it: he believed. holm
eller, that there was a majoitty of the peopl • ie
favor of riectiee isstitutiesa; and if the' wished
that principle @pelted as the Legiehstiv. C.wsdl
it would be dose.
COLONEL GUGY said that be was sot in
fairer slap elective Legislsti•' Cured. He bad
hitherto had a rpoke.mao inexpreee his opioious
in the hen. and gallant knight: but the time had
come for him to dissent from the coarse pursued
by that hon. member—to declare that he disap-
proved of the manner la which he had co.daeted
this debate. That bee. grahieman occupied a
h igh and pswerfol position, is which he had the
power of doing moch good to his country, and of
ad•anci•g int highest ioteresu; bot in his place
that ■tight he had not shows a proper mese of bis
position. 11e had only displayed .e anxiety to
wooed,to he crate the fee:iap of these opposed w-
him. The hon. member, perhaps, did sot in -
teed to do so; hot there was little doubt that it
would go abroad, that he approved of the scenes
of violence which had passed before their eyes
last year, of which he was sore oo Cbriarian
..., no mss of good feeling coud help dime -
priming. Ile was forced to create this breach
well his friends and the act gave him the great -
art pain. He could sot expect either. any sym-
pathy from members on tie other side *1 the
Home, whom he differed from ea mast sub-
jects, who had not been couched. and knew
n othing beforehand of ibe step be was thee taking
His intended coon wa well hooves to his
friends oo Ilia own side of the Hum however
the matter hod been discussed in private, and he
bed mode so secret e(bu views. Ile would put
the question on the breednt peseibie mood ; ou
rugether and ibex they at the press to muuno.
and so •a ss,tauoa we. gut 'p with great facile.
y. Now be considered that the boo. sod Bal-
last ►sight u a great party leader might have
pepped forward to reprove and denounce such s
system. These metavora assumed the right to
dictate to members of Parliament 7 they
ed all the meet of the measures if they were sue-
eeseful, ole they assumed uo responsibility e
failure. The an..aa'io• nho•ement had been ger
{p in this way, and the only effect which it hat
highter•o produced was the thorough disruption
of the Conservative party. There was no doubt
that this had been the emelt, and the creme -
peace was that he had no party to fall hack up-
on, for M would rather return into Inmate life,
sewn to emerge from it, Mae represent •
tioe int a 11 a loped that he would resit
to his dying day bis lore for the mother country
cad bis pride in the name of Caadtae. The .o•
seutiesite sppreled et the most medic' feelings
of the Musa heart, the lore of Mosey. The
pliant Colesel thee csare•ded that a•.etati•s
would sot tower that islet of wealth which its
advocates imputed. It was easel an firth .brei
the poverty of Canada, bot It should be reeoGee
ted that it was but a young eouotry sod had had
but little time to aecemu.m espied, bet im-
provement was going ott at a rapid rate. Hr
would say that the city io which they were then
assembled wits fit to be called the eiy of gents,
the produce as it an of sae generatisa. 'What .
accumulation of capital had takes pine. her. 4o•
nag that time In heeler, is public works, in oo-
det dnihiag. They might compare the airy fa-
vorably with soy other es the face of the earth,
ceasidsriog the short period of its existence; they
Auld point to it as proof of what could be due
to Canada ; she 051 yonag, active and staking
aped strides is improvement, and there um so
country where the enmforts and necessaries of
life weie more generally cnjnyed by the people.
He had (mond that the men who favored -
tion were the most ricioos of the eommaoity,
is.. who had failed in everytbiag theybad so-
&nakes, sad were mdy to rash into ioj scheme
however wild and etrnrapat. They were af-
flicted with- the vices of mrdidavarice and of dis-
honest speeslsties; he would not my that'every
annexationist was a drunkard, but he bad found
that every dr.okard was an anoexatioeitl : they
bad lowered sad were reedy for any schema io
raise themselves. The pliant Culooel spin
esteemed hie regret at seeming the tie with his
peli;ieal friends. Exempt in eases where minis-
ters were clearly proved to be in the wroog, be
reit that the only course left to him was to sup-
port them. One of the reasons for his doing so
was their conduct—wise, hottest and true, on •
the anaemation question. it was the only count.
they could have persued ; the offices cif. they
Crewe, the militia captains, the magistrates ad
others derived a croak aaeeant of i.fleeoee from
their position : would it have been fitting to per- 1
nth those who favored annexation to one that
power tosvertsrn the coostiintioo. -Some refer -
race bad bey made to the removal of the mai
of government ; that subject had hot lick effeetl
u pon his mist; he did not think that tt was for
the benefit of any community to ban the seat o(•
government ■nioapt them; it ec,-ro'wged letery
sod exln•agseee, and excited (settop of bitter
enmity. That opinion was a very common one i
io Mammal and the removal of the government
was ganerally acquiesced in. •
MONDAY, Mac 27.
Mr. CAMERON, of Emit, tree to propose as
Arseedlneat to the Addresses the &object of the
Clergy Reserves. Hs 'Horded to the credit of
the Provi•ee as being is • healthy condition ---all
our debeatores i• the English market haring
bees taken op. Efforts bed been made by the
tioeists to provost the passage of the Re-
ciprocity bill, with a view of furthering annexe. i
limo. He believes that es wheels of Reprrw.-
tation will be sapportd to this hoose. at all 1
events mot in the country, unless It Lia based upon
population. He referred to the expremem.
"ilssory" in the speech, in relerenee to Re-
treaehmeot, tad denied that the etpeetatioas of
the coasiry, os this peri., were illusory, sed
condemned the practice of referring ascii esbj•cts
to Committee. The chief int, berweeer,
wbieb he Mad with the speech, was she •win
otos of the Clergy Reserves. The people, at
the last election, were agitated upon the l'aiver-
e iy and Clergy Re -ere• questions. The hoe.
member Lir Oxforul wna1J have been re-
tuned had his constitutes not been told, shot
he would lend his ae.ipsoce to cart' this goes.
teen. 1 t would be mem-Dile m m.isain the
mare (.f partes, he mean:) artless the ewer.,•
mem took ap this gateau and meted i1. Mr.
C. eon -tended that there was a great difference
between the endo meets in Lower Cauda, and
the R in tipper Caned., and that the
te•sou 01 interfering wish the one. did sot exist
with regard to ISM other. Ile ,Ireland that
England had shown from the beginning • realist.
seat to eoesali our interest. and wishes u the
uestien, ad he asked why • "sarong govern-
ment" should not enstea4 fee the right to legis-
late en the @object- We are told we meal jet
permission. Did we net gen permissiea to legit-
* * as ere did, apes the Tuff, direety is the
thea of as Imperial Met 1 if. b.lieved we ea.M
. ietrueeee a MU, and use wen is fuser d ihae
w ade of seaesolse. w the reel likely ha effect
die •►het is rise. i(. eer'alely ttpsetsd sen
what bad aaesnrd lest res• ere sod the promisee
that was seeds that the geveraes.a; woo hi have
whetted. sed lie .@oM set aadeniaad why
• easy did ..e es ea The bou. ga•tk.as thea
road manses fru. the spr.shes s( eteleiere ad
their sepest Ste leo uesept, "le.rly penis/ that
negWhtiew with the irt/piited gn•erswnt had
beat frinl•ed. Re remedied that nor the ge-
verunest tett this Huse ilia. they lave est a.-
esadatad, owl that they amid set eeptiete He
...Id sot adreosd ether. hew as *Mum.
wleth wee wield be ..twined wee isiesIrd,
that debate depended the eostisa•ee is tafes al
the Aditinietntion. He had no eomms•'eaties
.ith the Ministry : hr appealed to chem wheth.
er► be had had any communicat'tom with them ,—
but he felt that he is bound by his sense of duty
to his country not to do anything to endanger
their moans of office. He wasted peace. ad
was averse to seems of vielesee: •ed be felt that
the natural effect of the eerie of the gallant
knight .was anarchy and eon(riou. There was
•I reedy • great relasatins of social bonds in the,1
country: the standard of politicalmorala wad -
ready too yew, sad the first duty of the L.gisls- .
tare was to mess it. ile (Cel. Gap) bed all
hs life acted with the misnrity, sod he expected
still to continue mode •o: bot he was not to be
caught aw•mug i psaiti•s aad laying down
priaciples at ase base, which be could not de at
aim her. He was prepared to bow to the deeis--
ion *(the .sj'wity, Every tee knew that he
was set pleaded whits the .eute which had pre-
sided thus ..as.. of 'Weser which the genote
ksigtt bad aluded m with gssstiseable tem;—
he was grieved by them, but he bowed to the
will of the nt.jerity. He might be wtlisg to
see the dismissal of the ministry, but he cold
..e no chance of each a reanti from the curse n(
the hen. 'member. if by ■ coalition between
members, who lite him were mesarchically in-
elieed, and these who were prepared to c000eet
Ilse mos ince with the seighborisg republic. they
could tors out that reisipry, what woad they
sub.rate fni thereat Could they form an sdnale t-
tr$eens In rake their places which would last *s
hoot 1 Perhaps the hon. memSer hoped that he
would eat up the ether member, as A•rns's rod
swallowed all the rest. if they could bring a•
bout oath a result ought the 1• do so 7 He
thought it was their duty i. abstain from all at-
t•ebs ea 1 Ela adrei•ietntw• M regard t• their
treatment lef. the ties commies. One who
had fought the battles of his eou•rry like the
ba. sad &toot height Auld bete rsteet
ifeaad • dram to support the euatitaties and
r... who .•pperter w Bs *Would est maw
deeply Woe lie 4iee.alli•s of She ep.sv►-••h tree
ten .f essster sad le him it appeared peek Is
tees nM to .esbrsee e•/ty otijret epee whieh
t• bring about a euhnw efparties, except le -
deed the Clergy Reserve•. It spoke d pscti-
e1 reessoree Het the eeoutvy eegslred, which
the hoses weey be smelt Miser n.phayed 1•
dier.esi.5 than melba' esteem elite\ it were
leach be;l't t. deep. R, thought it was lie debt
wad betett tat wig a kw wile ret the werNe(
•sa4aui tt it aggsred arMs aims it wee owe
of ere esrawrss eft do sr serf evert*, to eel-
mm upas truer- a•Yjr.s carob .a. sepal& et
ssieati... A the. preen et wse.eet wealth,
rub. ware 1 sl.aaed is • paniuhr t.w.er., urs
?WEL% t: ANi) SIX PENCE
tf IT Tale NISI) Oa TNR MAR.
NUMBER XVIII.
ruu'J be proper sow, when n we• declared . 1.
improper then. The mu.i.try mens mule this
gse.uoo, and clew they esd.a•oured to dome.
ahnuld oppose them, sed they wand Ind tat
the country would oppom there.
The f blowing is the ameodmeal:
That this Hesse deeply regret that the sb.orb-
ing question of the Clergy Reserves and Recto-
ries was ant alluded to in the Speech from the
Throne, that 11i. Excellency's Ad•,eere hese
met thought the settlement of ih • question of
sufficient inportence to introduce • measure ere
the sahject, this 11our firmly helices( that 1h'
upper portion of this Pro•ieee cannot meiny
political coouotment so lug as the proem o-
rangem-nra reepeehiog -,ib. Ressn. Reewies
coatinae.
Mr. MALLOCII asked some peones. as Is
the boo gentleman's &Streaees with his Into
corpora -s.
Mr. ('AMERON said hehad "biased the per•
aisotoo of His Ea-elitisty tie Governor Deseret.
is make public the reruns which ire/seed hies
te leave the Cabinet. ile bad pabliebed bra ea•
planstioos. and et present be did sot feel ioelised
to *Tut them (hear, hear.)
Mr BALD'.VIN rest after a Gale hesitation.
the !Evac maoile•ted a good dead of tuierwt is
what was eoming, and remarked that he seder -
stood the Ano. gentleman to refer to certain
austernrats flet bed appeared is the public pa-
pers. ile writhed as the bei. member hod pro•
,asst himself the author of thew d•caneats, to
make • tier obsenattoss: With regard to this
matter hi had every desire to deal with the hoe.
member u the footing on *bleb he formerly
stood. Bot when the bit. gentleman referred
to the staterooms in his letters, be was eew.pelled
to my that the e,dor be bad given to the matter
was •sytbi.g bet correct. The boa. member
had stated that the miaiatry desired to get rid of
him. Now they did set Metre to get rid of him.
is pointe( fact, ii seed set be possible that at
the time meatiooed they *sod have bad sash •
desire. Expediency abs*, weal have prevent-
ed it. Mr. B•Iderte thea said is wished first
to tall the aitestiou of the Huai to his (Mr.
C.'s) lettere He admitted that Mr. Creme
had expressed his desire to retire from the gee.
eromeot at the time he esrtioos, bet it was
wholly ea priest• grad ds. The hoe. geed*.
mao will recollect that he often expressed •
hope that in two or three years be would he able
to arrange bis private Newts and rears to poli-
ties. Another point that be *liked to Notice,
was, that the boa. manlier le the cunt of his
letters wished to impress epos the pabie that
he was relented sot to retire daring the trou-
bles is Mootresl. The only expreesiou of that
kind which he (Mr. B.) could ree•Iket was
prior to those, trouble., not derive the (rubles.
He could belt..* the boo. g.otlemen could
th'ok of leaving them at each a time. It was
possible the boo. gentleman might refer to
soother conversances is which 1. expressed tis•
sstireenoa with the elevation of Mr. Sullivan.
sad 1. (Mr. II ) urged him sot to be toe booty
oo that nee•rss. 11 ',WI 00 fhe fees of these
letters patent that the hos. gen.lenias desired to
let it go forth to the concert, that retrenchment
was the ground of his regigaation. It was tras
that he proposed the abetiiioo of the Aooisrant
Corumiss'tooersbep, but he never explained how
by sash aa amagemeat. He
both sections of the Province could bs estis6ed
attemped
to show how, those difficulties could be met.—
The boo. geotiemsn was offered the Chief Cam•
miseioaenhip, but he chose to refine it. He
would recollect perfectly well that at the seely
dimussioa ea these pois's, be (Mr. C.) urged
that the misty of the Assistant C.
should be raised ss as to equal the ether. He
eyes urged Iegisistive action, and it wpe est of
the retorts during these ." Why
didn't you alter the act last sesoiee." 11. (Mr.
13 ) referred to these facts to *hew that Fettr/eh.
meet was not the rea•oo why he bad kli. Th.
hoe. Atiorsey General thee reed from sue .f
Mr. Camero•'s letters is whieh it was mid that
entails chanes, sad Mn Price's retiring, weld
remove all diB¢.Ity. if that were se hew could
retresehmest be the reuse of the hon. getl.-
m••'. bevies? Debits it wss that t►. ode.
.f C of Crowe Lands wen to be
.hoItsMJ, which he was are the bon. geode -
man did not w,s!u. Not only did the hr. pre -
demos not give u's to ondeMand that retread'.
meat was the [nose of his testiest km, but letters
under his 0,11 band showed the enntrare.
Another p,,nt he snoatJ refer to was the
hon. ges'Iem. n's alloston to former difli-
cultism with his cnlleagu.e. Nothing was
m'•r: unfair thin to go back to such mat -
tete. When the Cabinet w as decided upon,
of enor•• no emelt. trendier •hnut1 after-
werds ohj •ct 7 What was the object of a
Cabinet ? ' Sometimes the arguinews of
the minority would convince the majnnty
and re.ults were arrived after dtsrueein•t
and deliberation. I:eltes this House, on -
lees the comer!, hold public men re*poad•
bleu for acts in which they have segnteeeed.
you will debauch the public mewl. This is
no petty goesiins, but nee, (public political
monl.lt. To.11u.irale this eery polar, be
' would refer le the erepos.l to soil the pnb-
le roods which had been mentioned.
Mr- CAMY.RON—Rot 1 Jiffeemi from
your policy, sod de. tared -that i meet pea
be held ysspnweible, tar charged with teens•
eisteYey, if when in an in immodest partitive
110.011041 tipper. t.
Mr. BAI.f)W I!1 adm•ttou the ben. meet.
her had, in' M. still remained in the C•111 -
net eel voted for t•. in point of fact, the
hoe. gentleman Med eel his hetet epos the
Crown L•r,l• (tm.euWnnernhip. M•.
Pries was to br g -t rid of. Col. Tach.
was (n be paned ever in order to arrow,
plus his (Mims. 1Io (Mr. A.) would ad -
if he most make a cheese, that he pre -
tis member for Snn1A York (Mr,
Price) to the bon member for Rent. H.
mild hes eolleagdee had great d.Beully re
!,sling cut ea what greend• the hen. .rum
Mr retired. He did not thick the hoe,