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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1850-06-27, Page 14 e • •• taveg ten e,.!toJt ,l-eet al .bariserele oil • • • • • • . • ; sae L' ris SEILLING8 AAAAA CB. VOLUME 111. "*-- • THE BIBLE. p ttr floodeet eielse, un weary - Bela& slo being. the Ron of Light ! %m..,, shodowe dark sad dreary Seeks e'er my heart to- might. That slue sea smith my madame -- Tees atesoias dry my tears, Wen 1 see as spos astatine'. • Dime the dusky vale cif years. Well 1 term that I ethnic All that sometimes makes me blest; A.d la min 1 ask my epee. Wby thigh/42g of unrest? list all day hats ben ironed nee Veins teas wetted me be ; Ala the seilight shades le re fouod toe Shrieking from • oameleattll. anis( sot denote. nett lightning - Hearin int the 'hander's roll - /lean iereible are tight 'nisi Buds serve_ ono my mill. • • "ma GREATEST POSSIBLE 0000 TO THE COREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER." GODERICII, COUNTY OF HURON, (C'. W) THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1850. 1M11 nature of the feed ortolan.. The oaly oats its own interests, aad agree •poo some however. which appears le hav• received I plan likely to teeet ib...4. desired. Who the appropriation of stricalturtats of the will join the undertaking 1 We should prevent dee, is that *bleb attribetee all tee ; like ib. °planes of art, cotemperarase upon fertility foiled is the earth to the decay of the subject of this Convertors, and the of veget•ble matters epos it or is it, and sooner the better. Tee new Libel Law defines the paboloos of plasia to be a peciali• would b, more fully cannon at such a ar renews, principle term d buten, meeting, thin se any other manner, and ways contained in the product of that is probable that Improvement* would be decomposition. Teat this theory no emirs the• suggested, which might noseenally inerene its value. Tbe Poet 0Mce Bill is already brought in, and the Prces can only hope for due attention by united action. • meeting, such as described, is decided on as early day should be Denied. All edftore. in favor of the plan, will wee the necessity of •t ones stating their intention to flake part, sod in naming the day most likely le nit, go that due arrangements may be mode. Polities must be thrown overboald for the nonce, and a meeting ol business perpuses, alone, bad in view. Finishing this short article, as some people finteh their lettere, we need only ny, "se early answer te respectfully requested."-Joasenal 4. Express. With the foregoing observations we ful- ly agree. It would have been well had such a Convention taken place long ago. The Press, whilst watehing over the interests of the public, has, in some measure, neglec- ted its own. If the proposed Meeting should be held, and united •nd energetic action be taken, there can be little detest that the matters above referred to, will be satielic- ly erroneous, I -believe for resson• wench I shall now antra : let Vegetable substan- ce* decomposing upon the surface of the earth are unfavorably !netted fur the generation of the putrefactive process., by being exposed to all those causes moat Leanne& to 11, 10 wit : beat, halal, and • free circulation of air. &.d. The residue of cremaelusis ne slow combustioe, (that kurd uf decompoeition which all substance* ap our to undergo wen unfavorably located for pntrefsetion,) is not maserre--" woody 5bre in a rate of decay" always proving nernrcions to vegetation of almost every kind. 3J. The trifling quar1ty of Me re- sidue, even if it were the beet of all ma - Oat berserk thrgreised arches • norms would not account for the great (or- bit es bivouac In-notht; lief, imparted to the earth by tbe decompo- An to soothe dew dusky marcher. sten of vegetabes matters epos 11, 11 is ex - Er Jag. bliss the Beek of Light ! emplified under the leaves In the forests, arid \ 1111 under clover or straw. 4th. There Is no AGRICULTURE. greater degree of fertility imparted by sub- • tance• which are decomposed than is •I. ways produced by substances incapable of - ON ?HZ FOOD OF ruours. . _ • thecompesit ton. Vegetable sentences, ',en gibe Neosho the Lope, and the mita when ploughed under and permitted to de- torityselttea. ,Bevides tbeee matters, their ea. crampon, will undergo the putrefactive pro- are • ,varietv of other., relative to the pro- se ea. BALDWIN. cen, provided they hate prentouolv been :ermine, which might be advantareou•ly • Tire sealegy existing 1...twee:animal and reiterated wuh water, or by the siehtion oI can vaned at such a Convention. The pro - • or bot manure for reasons which penal bee oor cordial approbation ; and the remain but a slight knowledge of chemistry inner 1 I. carried into effect, the better. - to understand. That they do not undergo Guelph Advertiser. that process under ordinary circumstances, is plainly manitest. re•getairle 111, i too striking to have ens - rthe slightert attention to the subject. e. indeed truly wonderful to observe bow naeireet it 11 throughout, from ehe Menet 30 18. Innen ernes of the saunal and vege- -- nable kiegdons. Hest, light, air, and water, appear to ho equally tedispensible to the wystenee of both, in guantities differing AWFUL DESTRUCTION OF LIFE. - lit. Because vegetable matters, when pinagh- BURNING OF THE STEAMER rd soder, are nalaneably located for pyretic- G. P. GRIFFITH. lin, Ly Min depraved of costae* with air which nil siatanalle. isccordiag to the natural • - nrestituttion of eacb in•eveleal species. but i• admitted to be essayist to that proem*. 2L Buffalo, Jose 18. esandesti# essential to all, fur neitber plants It costradiets the expenses a every practical %Vbeto first the alarm was given, theori- ser animals can PINK fur bey length of farmer, that the cI a fieid is of al nreta- sengers were cool and collected. It was time if 'Malty deprived of any one of them eon when fielowed, the mon certain it lo to pro- thought the boat could reach tbe land; bat Food is iedispeseible to' vegetable ois well d any • es to animal lair ; in the respect, •Ien, the F. - • • en" i , era be 'la" *he •truck upon a sand bar half a mile front wain, I, vet, apparent, town „eve, of muted to the soil. by plowing soder green Tem nee", aad then panic reigned. Tee pes- o( lead or by leer strawlever h sub .F*11°11ffig a° 'hundant euPPIY °I. lb. weeds. if Me- be -read iniameltaiel- before richest food, and (Aura consuming imagers became wild with despair, and pion mull a qoantity as almost to induce the a° pkthabiap. at'h„ Th.': krnii,, .iiiek i: .1....y. Zed toto Abe water as if life were there. - belief that they exist without it. Vet for inverted •to the earth by a luserint growth of. Of the cause of the fire we know nothing. al those pleats aad animals which interest clover, is not in tbe slightest degree damn:shed and tbe Paved can explain nothing ; they Eke agerculturist, sI is very obvious that by IL, removal of the whole crop precion te were asleep. Al! they know is, that about food is abeelotely mono ial. A beeeficent prordeoce bas elan an abundant nature! fallowing. I b•ve been induced to ascribe the three o'clock, or about daybreak. the alarm penmen io mille for mon, and the young feetilin of ibe nil to shade ..d shade nal?, for of fire was given, the shore was in sight, e of lawn annuals tebecb appear to be more reasons which follow: let. That Made la indis- hope said it could be reached, and all were especially nation lor his comfort and oup• pennable to the generation of the putrefeetive still. But wben tb• bar wee struck, hope port. and it le not reasonable to believe precede ia all outweinces. bd. That tee s.a.ee was converted into dermair, and wildly death that ke has scented to mak• a imitable of tlee nails when densely ended, is located pre- by fire was shunned to meet death mid die prorates fue the vegetable creation upoo . , . , else.), la mat intuition Moat favorable IA the which animal life so essentially depende.- waters. Tb• passengers plunged inte the generation of Cie putrefactive preens. namely, In a close, cool, dark, damp locaties with • eight costaet of air. 3d. The •ppinessee el' It eas occured to an that &careful observe lion 0( 14.. facts connected with ace • • OA. aerial to the growth .4 .44 plants would tend mere t• elucidate the inyteey of their all- the earth Mehemet, that it bee antigens a meat thee the many thoorelle•literculttlonalchemicie chair. rot It it, changed to calm, c.o. which tlee subject bas already eecited.- histenee, and fertilizing qualities. 4th. The Vim espereence of every practical farmer natural i, iion ,,i...ra 1 lead., and the teaches Attu that he cannot expect to rna• tore c c of saw kied in an exhao.,..d great fertiety of forest lania, etyma be oceoust. .Oil ; but if he manure et, that is, if he place .-d for by any other ptieetple eth. That the la it a auffictent quantity of any subetance, fertility imparted to tee sthl dents& solely imam animal, vegetable or micerel, , which has, the density •rel dentine of the 'hide, without bees previously subject...I 10 the paitrefac- newel to the qualai of the feinting substance titre fermentatron, h. has it the. prePbred-6th. That large quantities of the richest mould, to yield him a crop net of one kind only, ' which is !mown to be the beat food of peels, but of any mad every kind which he nosy desire to cultivate. By ouccaseive crop. of haye been found in locations where vegetation any owe kind lie may again exhaust it, and never could hat, exioted. ith. Thy the fent- t4.. he can effect much sooner by • eerie lit y imparted by tee growth of some vegetable crop than by others. Ha is nut ignorant matters epos the surface of the earth, is not in• of the facts tbat some 141'.t. abbe" to creased by ploughing them under, Of diminish - hat* a peculiar &Snow for some of the neu• deal silts, which primate tbeir growth is a 01 4., theirP',Tien remoeal imhu beengiven in ammonia . remarkable manner, yct he knows that Meth portance these sae, are 0,4 dee seinen. uf 14..,,, III So aliment of plants by many agneolierists In coltoeywnee, 1 preserne, of the fart lbw it is pietas, for they wall not rause them to exist in as exhausted soil. And he has ylet to etways resented mad evol•ee from all muleteer.. liana that any substance whatsoever. ant- during Inc pattelective fermentation, even from teal vegetable or mineral, well enable him to the earth inter, according to " Thaires nisei - raise a crop of any kind in as tmpoverialied plc.. of Agriculture," page 1-49: -" Wino soil, except (boss substances which have kneaded cloy is exposed for • coosiclitra',:ti period bee. previously euejected to putrefaction, or in large masses, and so • dam:. centime it which are capable of epeetely undergoing that process. assume. all the charsetere of en•retac• en. Am - Then familiar facts appear to me to de- motes is thee .,,,,,,,,e 4„ 4,, the. pm,iog the pin. menetrate clearly that there to but • one nee. of nitrogen, which is a constituest portion aliment for all plant., to wit : the recites of ammonic" I .m net 'prised of any fact. of putrefaction, which le consumed by them which derifenstrate satisfactorily that ammonia, in tamest quantities, according to the or any one of its salts, carbonate, nitrate, mariate, natural appetites of each particular options, but todispenosele to every on, Inc if deer' or phesphite. is the •Iiment of plates. when •ed of it they ure•itairly perish, however separate from those seteneemi which rewrite plentifully supplied they may be with every thee,. And from .11- the obenvation • I More other essential. The l•bore of those leara• bees able to make, I feel confideit in the user, ed chemists who have rector:1y directed *ion that the fertilizing virtue. of manures are their attention to agriculture, appear to ate to bo, es rows aa alone of their predeennenrs not volatile imbalances. Although shade is is- /. (maim nen ,,, wird, a tbe edeleaepeerte dispensable to the prodactioa of the putretactim stone, by wince they expected to trans- preen., and the mere drone the ohne the more mute tin beset metals tote gold. If the au. ',sieve. oe, manor., e., ar,„, the p Mee,. bee Wye, of the bodes of young aeturals would b„„,, vr,,,,,d and , h. ,,,,,,,,,,,, kerne, 00 e atirdoctorily demonstrate that they had were ie tiv, .,.,hp, thotiotottt, It, fareeeine eltrollied ..?.ly opoe milk, what practical ad- qualitise i• the elighvest degree. mniego would result 1 Can the daemon teeth theta:rimer to make milk 1 -or teach him the preens ky welch he may be enabled tit Mb wag ono of its constituents, wives webill Iliewire to ee a cheaper or. bet ter sotrommat Illaathet so Imisntifolly sup- mode by tern any eatemponries : peed by eaten 1 Ase mile appears de me „ A. the Put entire Depertmeet is t• t• b. O.'.""14 lb° ca" w414 leePoll 1*14.. COW, wader the erwisiderston .5the Ilmeee, f01 Oa • : **ill et" be WO are of *pintos that there •hoeld be a .4.4. 4., asisbyes to separate theozoi. "'inlaid remold entivestroo of the Preen in in* city of the lake with 4n infant child in his arms. mole free it. or make 51 in mas. ny Teem", to try if pimigibli, to bosun, the A group of fire et on emigrant., mall. WO- W IMO 41114 *Moped by Pnwebneoi biune• prietioge ne moment free eschoneee.- men sad cbildren, wete found with their ly, by the petrelate eve proems. That tent What easy ser Cotemporarre• 1-C. C. Ai- wa!' alma is easielale of booed en•••rted ince,. arms closely locked together, evidently ha into the food of pleou is • propertur ito 4. Thp him 0,,..ineinn .44,..1, reemeob \ Id 1.11rid sunk in tbat condi- i fere ID. eenatioe 04every pinkies' erne ,be pomp.. of making irepeeemitationto 5. S0. erred. %b. boat a Own' il Pea.'" by 4.01.., " er'""*IlY b•- mend' a "neeting of Editors in ',Toronto, for Ill- it as "Penal lime "17 18.. kmaal" oe. that I mama hetp beim* sni'lliellad Owl Gemieureeert 55 the eue}epet .4free amebas- Di ea , .. II rise eihnel.i emulate • lionbt ea bees ebortersd by 0 th• gee, and whin mottoes erboaareted well the More new „Ail emerameete. we tbnes the oily of Cleveland, awd haw row. down to idea . peg bee, turd weeld gladly enaper• Whir the bodies. The citrus' In the li- "Wi 1" is elleiTin it 094. Tb••• are revive crafty of the diameter are doing all in their "••••••brete neva wirier the membere of the . ..._ , , lime seem "be beee, nood. oed a rolleif se. pOnese. .he esrvevore comfortable. -"I '..sing write g4.• eel oopoplosito to A large 'reach re Wog deg is Clevelood to lei"'tbe ''' Teen!' Ferlett- will be fully alive to ea wean, i,„„ wen breectit to Bovalo. Its Ili Itatateestabliter. W. hese *bet bury these . Peedese. A number CONVENTION OF EDITORS. The Veneering remarks in reference to a Proposed Coneentore of Fahtere, have been lake, and but few were moved. TIM osibrber of passengers on board is thus stated :- steerage, 256 ; cabin, 45 ; crew, 25 ; total, 396. Men in the cabin, and on the lower deck jumped overboard in crowd., some 30 at a ti'ie. The captain returned on the upper deck, near his rate room, forward of the wheel house. Alen all the p gers had jumped overboard, the captain threw the barber's wife, his own tnother-in-law, wife and child, into the lake, and plunged ie himself. Ile remained a moment on the eurface, when with his wife in his arms they both sank together. There were •t least 250 emigrants. ehief- ly from England and Germany -45 or 60 cabin passengers besides tbe crew, number- ing about 25. The number of these saved on the beach WAD arty 40. COL. •hwat half -past three yesterday morning about the smoke pipe. The crew endeavored to extinguish it without alarming the ..e. , but tbe dames spread so rapidly that the cry was soon raised, " Sue yourselves." The bur - heaps deck was literally packed with emi- grants sleeping. and wben the fire was an- n000ced as beyond control, the utmost con• fusion and terror reigbed. The boat was immediately beaded towards land, and grounded 600 yards from shore, but the heat had been go intense that most of the pas- sengers had jumped overboard, preferring a watery death to death by fire. The poor emigrants were crowded forward •nd liter- ally pushed overboard by those re mg from the flames. Soma had presence of miod enough to throw overboard their chute sad swim epos them, but nearly all were lost. Both yawl buts were ee badly burned as to be unlit.. The beech was already strewed with the bodes for oevirral rode. They lay so thick nos the bottom of ties lake, and in such *billow water, tbat tbey were &idiot (bent and taking them ashore by the boat load. A coroner and hie jury were in attend- ance, to ascertain Dames, reeideocu, Ooe man was looked up from the bottom t. Under any tied ever/ tebeelt bas aniseed Its enriaten for tin* alert% ie always fiord 1. 8.,. a pest feetileas. Mese isitmetore t eisenettelefireet laseard sad seieet is sanest avervalee end smeary. 6 aseigembel le steleaterk1 - the the ear* bad te the • 7 ','-',,Nri----•-•e•iii,-inet,esetortier It bas been said that moat of the passim gers jumped overboard, but it appears that the boat covered) with the boon of the burned. THS PUBLIC ACCOUNTS. We are indeeted to- ll. Smith, Esq., the popular and respected member fur Went worth, for a copy of the Public Accounts for 1849, coutainang num interesting facie tad figurer, •0 abate -set of which we now lay before our readers., The items of Rev- enue .menace: Custonos Doties £412,626 ion 3d; Excise, £31,131 16. fed; Ught-Flouse or Tonnage Duty, £1,000 9. 7J; Bank Im pests Z10,763 4. el. Militia Commiesions. Fines, Mc., £21 5. Id; Finn sad Feely - tern, including Seinen, £1,315 9s 241: Caen! Revenue £14,379 Bo 41: Puttee Works £42,615 le 7d; Territorial 1.9,56e 14. 7J; or a grand total of Weiner/tie amount mg to £513,431 Se IIJ. The expenditure involves outlays fort Interest of Provincial Debt L'.80,11t5 la 7J; Interest on Turnpike lents 41,601 18e 4.1; Cavil envernmetit C3J,t51 leo Id: Administration of loftier En2.330 15e 61; Provieetal Penitentiary £,3.8')0: Legislature L59.364 10s 31 Fere', cation £39,601 19. 7d; Agricultural Seem - nee £8,585 4s ild; Hoopitals and other Charities £19,4442 les Provincial Geologteil Survey £1,971 31; Miele* £4,0111 le Id; Maintenance of Light -Hooses £4,850 Its 10d; Pensions £12.830 3a 4.1; Indian Annui ties £6,656; Miscellaneous £10.788 134 4,1: or a errand total of Expenditure amounting to Le50 913 8. 2d• Donn tbe two total item. stand thus: - Total Revenue £513,431 Is 1 Id. Total Expenditure 450,913 8. 9d. Leaving erten of Rev- enue over Expenditure £89.617 14.91. This favorable state of Om Finenee most be gratifytng to the people, mod speaks well fnr the ability of the Inspector Geoeral.- With the addition of the recent loan ad- vanced le London we tent anticipatebetter times. The renventiee derived from the Public Work., exhibit a ready. increase, and every year will doubilsee add to the profits from the. source. This increau over 1849, is Z:8,637 49e:l.-them fact temente II. in homer ler a •pee.le adoption of Free Trade principle* to their fullest extent. - The ineretse in C011iOMP, over 1848,, is £108,263 Ite IJ. -pretty indicative of ruin and decay." We have not space, in the repent nomber, for more particulars, but this Vs wsubeect which ca s be returned to with advantaem.-Jevenel end Erprese. Uvruropten EtoquitNCR.-A Catawba warrior in 1922 named Petet Harris, known ht. wants to the Legislature , ofg I -1 "1 am one of the lingering sorvivore of an almost extinguished rime. Our graves will soon bo our only habitations. I am one of the stalks that still remain in the field where the tempest of the ruolniinn Palmed. 1 have fought against the British for your @eke. The British have disappear- ed and you •re free; yet from me have the British taken nothing, nor have I gained anythIng by their defeat. I pummel the deer for subsistence -the deer re disappear. n', I must rarve.-God ordained me for the forest, and my ambition is the shade. But the strength of my arm decays, and my feet fai! me in the chase. The hand that fought for your liberty us now open for your relief. In my youth I bled in bottle tbat you might be indepeneent-let not my heart in my old age bleed for want of your commiserates.. e EnILISH Iloases.-It is said that accord- ing to a late censure of Engle -RI, the num- bet of honed in that country has been found to have diminished from 1,000,000, to 200,000, within the last two yeare-in other word., the Rail Road has dispensed mete of ft0.1 000 horses, aad these animals, al well as here, - used for transportetion ; and thus the grain and food which the 800,000 horses :Ormer. ly consumed, have been diseensed with. and the land used for the growth of hey and grans is devote.' to the growth of grain alone, for the supply of bread. Frost C•LIFORN/A. Tb. Steamship Cherokee, arrived at New York on the 611 from Chores and Jamaica. She left the former port on the 29th and the latter on the 3)th of May. S1,152,361 in nett° were entered on the manifest, in addition to which 9400,000 is reporteJ as in the handi of passenger.. The news from the isthmus i• of more than the usual intim:ante. Tbe bad feel- ing between the Americo', •181l0f8 at Panama and the nature ialeohinede, which has been long evident, has at Ian resulted in an epee collision, attended web loss of life on both sides. The Legislature adjourned on the 21L1 of April, after a session of one hundred and twenty-nine day.. During th• session, 143 sets aod 18 joint resolutions were ad- opted. Amon/ the laws adopted was one creatsng tb1" rkltsibtrogsatYabl: 7,7,;' •7. t State. min shall• a California- Another regulates lin busi- ness of mining by foreigners. NetwePtrwa Poirr A on• -It is to be hoped that the Legislature dealing with thi" matter will relieve the Paine of • most oppressive and intnlerable tax to which it is now aubjected in paving Postage on Exchange papers. In eansda the Pres. has but scanty encouragement, and we may very reasonably ask a privilege 'which is granted to it in the neighbouring Union, where Newsmen* are meat more liberally supported. We would also suggest that Newspapers be earned free of charge to • dinette* no greater than thirty mile*, from th• publishing otter Let the system be fairly and filly carried into effect -let the ammo spirit be errercieed toward. the Press in Cando as in other Coen- ltle•e-lekd lam Hoes of Pastel entemune eating will be Hie en ow, vast entilllee Oboe, Analog late the ernotry eommer• err, *trete! aei moral bootithe from a thee - send moires. -R 1. Pocket. --imonnoterpttr • DasaT EINIWTION- OF INtutlernT, 1851 . - It appears that by • return, made up to th 6th ult., 0(the yincriptien hole sent in the suns of f39.140 hoe becn enrulled This does not meted* Manchester, Liver poul, and a great many other large •owne SO that, at • medlerais ealeulatioe it mat 1 TWELVE AND SIR PENCE aT MS BOO Of TES FLU. NUMBER XXI. would the alma effectually snare tbat enj. 14 a woo indeed the only comet that was nen 55 . him, it wen the only course which could ressio • to Canada that COInpieff• control over the Clergy ludo which they had resignal to the Impered aathoriticia. it would ot Coe/No byre bets noon be supposed that Le0,00e has been already subscribed. This looar much mere en couraging than was as flee sctucipated 'eh. Committee in Lon lies 'saltiest that future, returns nosy be sent in every 1.41 - n igbt .-Earlisis paper. publish in this the Ball of the ilus. Meleolin Cameron for olacieg the law of Protean, on a mere o atisfactory footing tbn it is at present.- Tbe Bill te Mr. Sherweod on the same •uh- ject would not remedy the real grievance ni which the country complains. It would merely. reduce the costa a leer anteing., while unnecessary trouble and an unneees sari expense would .111 remain, and the legal 'ergo°, "only and not othetwin or elerstribere," would coolant's'. to be nett. - We hoes Mr. Lamerures 4.141 oral become la . -Xe,-18 American. is accordance with les feehug• that the Govern. mens enfold have seitedly brought dowa • noes- • es 'yet, to 1. adopted by a large majority of the Hotter, sod slipporred by the people; it would lune pleated tem nisch could it have been oe. Although die principle ia the queition was of the •Iminiat impohanee-- nae emit which ne looted un., recede -he eyed not say that it wadi the net teal gamin lo Canadtas iaterests which existed, Sesame. alibosgh particular decominatiooe werol mow highly fevered thaa °then, the Clergy Reserve* ens not give. them in perpetuity, they were so. ly rectorate, • potties of tee bitterest so the Sales. sod to. power 05 revocation woo still le tb• hands of the people Fie ties mean lie terl4, that the immediat,e melesieni et this questlos wad sot of eine vital unperisoce et pretest as dome others. Bit he % iebed s. wok tiso ques- tion, eheiher, if, when the government not ern on ibis question, those melanin who agreed with him (Mr. P.) had reeved, be wished to ask wheeler there was a party in that house strong neigh to force the remainieg members to make Mi. a cabinet gammen esti carry it throrigIrthe House. He believed net he could answer is the negative, and would be have been justified so retiring because all lies colleagoes rid not entirely agree with him. when the questios could net be carried by his doing so, and wben he bad the liberty or 'erten- 01 his opinion and giving his vote open it, al- though it was not • cabant question. Then was a principle involved ea the (neaten which struck at the very root of religious liberty, Glad which no hottest mai ia Canna could give his assent. He (Mn. leice) had not I bit prin- ciples oa this subject in Canada; be had learnt them in bis native coustry, where be had always contended as he had uniformly done titre, for tee great penciple of civet and religious equality. When be came 10 18. Po:wises la 1828, be found ibis question agitating the Proven, from one end to the other; it had agitated it ever Mace, and it would coYinge to agitate it until it wee decided on the principle. of troth and entice. He bad always costeaded that one-seventh of the lairds of Canada set spoil by the consiitatinal act. belonged at any rate 10 .11 religious denoraina- (loos; he had conceded for it ie public life and be would do sio in private, when he should reties from hill public dens. He held, that became, Ilia religious views or on cifereb gerernment, he was not therefore to be pat on • differeat sad inferior footing froln him. • That would be to make him resposible to 1211111 for that belief for which he was only rightly responsible to hi. 7 God It was tbe part of no benefit nose to set op • • one denomination over their fellow religiogiatie it wog ibis that bad given !is. to all the strife and dimension which bad existed in Cased, so long. An bonmember hod said *bat he bid started in public life, is 1828, a good Coneerva- tive is one mine, but he had always conceded that the people of Canada should have Meese» management of their own affairs. W•• were fireis.-The New York pa pers of the 16th inst. contained telegraphic accetints (rem Washington which nuke of the probability of wee from the refuted of the Cuban authorities to give up the Ame- rican prisoners. The following appears in Monday's papers, telegraphed from New Orleau. The eases belli is thus apparently removed :-[N ort h A merican . Netv'Orlearts, June 15th. We have received intelligence from 11a - vane as late as the tenth intim', and are happy to state, that the Spanish govern- ment had yielded trete. repredentations of our Consul, aided by other American •utho- rity, and e'er passing through the forms of a trial, had liberated the American prison- ers taken nn board the brigs Georgiana and Susan Loud. Naw Coeoer IN GeOhoia.-An Eneliah gentleman, agent for a London Emigration company, has purchased newton hundred and fifty theusand acres of land in Irwin co. Georgia. for the purpose of getting it fet- tled by English operatives and manufactur- ers. They are situated in a fine cotton growing region, near navigable streame, copiously ouplied web water power, and possesees an abundance of timber. Ile will urge upon his company the speedy construc- tion of • railroad from rhea, lands to some o((h. principal towns in the vicinity. Da. WIRBSTFA...-1110 Sit prem. Court o• peoed this mornIne, and deliverea their opinion in the case of Dr. %Veinier, to the effect that form necessary to consti- tieing • legal trial bad been complied with. They were unanimous in dismiss:tog the r• • -• Boston, that the tiorernor would, next month, fix the day (or the execution of Dr. Webster --and that there is no possibility of the prisoner escaping from the extreme penalty of the law. HAMILTON. -We have sio change ;* notice since our last -Prices remain steady, yet it t• to be feared that the backward- ness 01the none will materially affect the price of grain. The %Vbeat neon light soil is rapidly coming into ear, and in many cases before the straw has grained two thirds of its natural length. The result will be smallness of ear and short crop, though n early one. Corn is attacked by the black sandfly-tbe cabbage and potato crops are very much injured by the gems cause. TIM. gran* es very short, and upon the whole the prospect is somewhat gloomy in this neighbourhood...-. [Spectator. TORONTO. -In filer some large lot. changed hands, toward+ the cl 413 of last' week, at 22. 6,1 per barrel. The weather for some time back has been most favour, able for farmers; and the late ratter were of incalculable benefit to tbe crepe and the cerunary, worry" to-•.• mew than we remember it to appear for a eorrr time. The fruit trees promise well; so alive, does the wheat ctop, especially the fall wheat the" ear's" of which are jest neer beginning to make their appearance; and if the harvest should fortunately prove to be a propitious one, it is confidently hoped that en abendant crop will reward tete far- mers 'shone. But we regret to oheerve that proepects are not so fevourable in other places. -[Colonist. BUFFALO, Juno 17tb.-The market is still dull and inactive, and a shade in favour of buyers. We hear of pale. of ,a few hundred harrele Michigan at Be See: 300 barrels Ohio, common brands, at 85 41c. MONTREAL, June 17th. --In Floor n o chang• to notice. Ashes in active demand; at 811 advance on Saturday's quotations, caned by the fire at the Ashes Store in New York. Pots, 29s 3d. Pearls, 21146•1. crouincial Parliamtnt, 110088 OF ASSEMBLY. From the Globe. TUESDAY. Jen le. CILS114111r SESIWINLA Mr. PRICE roes mod wed, that the subject he wee 'beet to iatredoce to their nen groan. re the meet yell impotence to the weleheing nI penisee, which mold enter their seen - tin. It was esti which had agitated the eon - try from Dee rod to the other, mad unless it ea• melee to tin sistidese‘a a the people. they 'meld serer he conteatid .squirt. It had bees mid by new penen, that the IBOSOOr• f• settle this great entities ebeeW have nee hireoght t• by tee Government, and likely., ler it should have be.. by a Bill, which wooed be net been to entices Ilto Royal sagesl. is- sued of en address rime the Imperial esthete ties fe pewees& a hill No moa es that Haase we tent of it. felt a 11•011111.1 &sore to settle that gasmen thee be, (Mr. Pee. 1 sad Ibe bed sakes Ili. penal warm beeves, be believed) that it Mr. BOULTON [Norfolkenvemile thber with iromeal cheers. Mr. PRICE said that be could speak of the political career of some members who wen so very liberal in their prokesions now, bot wbo, *a former times, were the keenest opponeets .1 11. rights .4 4.. nipple, while those professisg rality then wire opened to them now. He re- called to mind parallel cases is Leann: There was one member who was a string oppirseet - ----1 eirrhoe of larg coeutry, and exerted the *he rime.' powers of hi. Milhootrato the passage of t be Reform Bill: but @wasp to say, Se Thomas Lethbridge, after its passage, became as ultra a Liberal se be bed been a Tory --and lost all tna influence. Sir Francis Bur- dett, an extreme Liberal, bed beeetne • visileste, Tory, and he too loot all his lades -see. Sir Charles Wetherwale too. who bed den every- thing io bis power to retard the progress of re- form, cheered his views, and was pet oat of public life for e•er. If bee. members is Mae House, unlike these mete bad followed a coo- sistent couree, they might bay. gen doss to *bear graves with laurels o• inir beady hod - ibey forgotten their selfish •iews, and followed • manly dignified coarse of opposition, not reck- lessly •ttempeng to tear do••• ansi destroy, thee would %aye been honeyed for their consistesey at Inst. These member., if they bad say •in- littion, some din hoped so doubt to occupy Ms goyeroment mats; they ought to reflect thyt when they did oe, they would feel .grieved et reeetnI.gtho factions opposition they Were sit prevent offering. and they ought net to allow their bloated hopes and disappointed eineia- limn to lead them astray. When it wee said that this question should have been settled by a bell from ibis Wiese, afterwerdti to receive the Rm.! 'sweat, he licked the Illone whether be wee to stultify bemire( by itereemtng a bill ehich they 5.80 00 right to pave or ..111, be to take tbe court, moot likely to recurs the eed view. What differeoce be wooed like to be la- w.. there between perm, a btl! to re - vein tler nattier of Imperial authority. et asking that authority to per than tell. Tee ant enold sot bo doer legally. bevel**. the barrel 'semen had pawed a meteor... lb. sehret Gt oed request; though ifor set wee eel easedy is seconanera tette ear wishes. Mew bad been so woke retsed eosins( It, an 11 hod ben la open - tion for the ps11 tea year'. Is had te be sere net twee seeeidered 5 eetilemeet si sb• sweeties by tesi people, bet by their wenn Mel had Wel their tacit coney to in night M Great Whale to legislate ea the mho... if 414 bin r -r--1