HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1850-08-01, Page 1•
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THE GREATEST POMEIULE GOOD YO TIM GOSATENT PONS/8LS .118111 1181.
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( ;ODE ItI('11, COI NT) OF HURON, (C. W.) i tHURBDAY, AUGUST 1, 1850
110611116111 •1
• P o c t r Pe
' silver sand, or peat, upon Otte scatter the The free► leaves of the cabbage contain
sees Mode. If they are excessively weal! from ;)t) to 'Al per cent of water.
tett therm before 'bowie: with dry sand or The expense e( laid to du the same
pear, in order to @operate them; and again amount of Fork with stento *aging. now,
with press all fist. i• only one-third of what it war in 11115.—
Thenen provide
e some coarse Mees --any ScuaG/k fJwtriria.
sett will do; but Bog -moss of Sphagnum
is the best—having previously soaked it in
boiling water to kill insects or their eggs. THE, HARVEST.
Press it till wetness to exchanged for damp ' —
ner, and tlaos, whit's wuuu, sesttsr it every day tho reaping cradle is being pli-
luosely over the seed.. teres" it down: in. cd by sinewy arms, .umnlated be thu tm-
eon fuer tM Mows $ common. garulon pot, polies of light and jocund heart". ant note
lay • the on the hole, and the operation it withstanding the enervation t.•ndenc,es of
performed. an lntoneely broiling sun, it Is noverthelers
But the little apparatus thus contrived always deliciously healthful and pteennt
must be watched. In • day or two lift op to witness the luxuriant rustic aceou of the
the pot, raise the Moes and examine thu harvest field, and listeu to the merry laugh
suede. If the moss is dry, which is not of the athletic cradlure, ■rid the peculiar
likely to happen, .gni. damp it with warm "crunching" sound at every viyfuruus bwifM
water. 1f all is Mbit, have patience. 'Thus o` the implement, with which the "golden
go on until vim find your seeds begissieK cora" falls a welcome and kindly reward to
to grow. Then remove the file from the the patient nod I•bonous husbandman. On
bole to yonr pet, and leave them for anoth- such a joyous oceseion, the earth looks fere
er day. At the end of that time you posit- a region of care and sorrow, and poor and
bly find that the seeds hare grown much "uninspired" indeed is he, who, with such
more; if so take away a part of tho moss, bless:nes before biro, can resist the tern-
aries
crn-
soss to giro the young thiogs more air and tattoo to MI a spare corner of a thankful
Igfnt._ Tho seat day rade the pot on one I hear►, with a warm gushing( aspiration of
side, so as to open it to the south. Ther I gratitude sed praise. to the Bountiful Giver
may be den* with a stone placed beneath of all good. A number of years ago, in •
village hard by, a competition took place
amongst the domespoets to write in one
verse, the best inscription for • flour mill.
The successful Mos occur to our iniad now,
and as they appear not inappropriate to the
eoasun of harvest: we give them, for the
Mot time in pont:—
lite etrt�at
•• Leak au apes W ethos w6iwoA r rod."
Thaw arts . last towboat my hoose wan elms,
Tb. eels Mug ea this deer adds sari b.
To wkone ray souewa and my joys eau brieg
Lind tbosghtw fir the loos heart that gave
lies boas
1 have asp else to love, sone else to my
•' Got speed se" se my eelitery way.
Tkee sanest est haew lie year meg i.aj.Nses
Thar sty fell seal bad some 1 w Iosg foe disc;
Its ewer "ratchet", wed its deep 'seem
Withls "ma's hero( ma sever, Hover be.
Yet thou Aril Ieek me, by that earnest eye
Which leets Ism my owe so moersfi!ly.
Rehm we, lustier, dist M save thee pain
Great daimon i weak hsave,dsep p•aga *adore,
Ay. 1111, dosth iay wifely 1 ...ld
Thos hfe wed Mpps.r .tss.W be ..erre.
Se if I grteve thew, bent with vas I pray:
Itis rby.gled thea 1 weeld sink alway.
The eager, wet*hfus love that teeth sash leek,
TMs meths each change of sad se playful
meld,
Heti tied try face as Owen an open book,
Amid noised ebaagse bodes little good.
The mild, ea Imager peaceful sal rrese,
hath farrowed tb7 yasag brow and charged thy
041.1.
For thee et elites desposding sad JTpreated,
Beam ersshisg serum' Heine to weigh ten
dowu,
Thy pleasant knish wiM be for day. sI reek,
Thy beet will oiler a deep ad angry frown,—
Another. wilder mood beth r5zed my soul
With sad forebodings I might not control.
N.v, de sot tyre from me ! my brother. stay
For 1 are ewes( to speak. Through many a
eight
1'v. watched IH sleepless seems!' for the day,
Pretties for strength to plied with thea aright.
Aad till this marneat, think tits"—hast thou
heard
Fg.a hpa ofmiu. one harsh, complaining word?
It le set for tarsal( 1 bid thea hunt
• The sh.1e whose alarmed links have booed
se Wog.
These ilpolM rM.gltts were all in silence nursed.
W 1 4ee karma to " suffer sad be ureas.!'
T. lobar far thee 1 should be too blest,
If j,y toy toil du mpaogs ooaIJ be at rest.'
!tie 11111 thee tit wasting, by err.••,
The motile intellect -note thee given,
Asa Mist 1 tear salmi Otos can's( repress
This fearful ,him, ,t stay b. from Thee given 4
1•sasiog • wreek of what was Dem so (alt—
ler f "•",nett 1 bid that sow beware.
Tbi.k, oh, my brattier ! of the happy tears
We pasaedewgetber in our ehiMhnni'e home;
Thi.k of Ore .wegslias sub., the bitter tear.
Wish whkh we left it through the world to
ROW
Asada, last wetah, in nwro(u1'Irise, kept,
Bessie IM ante wh.rrboth oar parents slept.
Theo by the memory of that hate eve,
When we together breathed forth this prayer,
That tbemgh it w.5 mer lot on, earth to grieve,
'Met eamew we weight still is Madness *bare:
A•, br the pemis•tr. est paints liven.
'Plat we might stove m ,tweet Mem to yea
heaves,
I pray thee pause. when ir thou
drain
With thoughtless, eagerg
*wise,
Ae4ku this vow the trembling, hand restrain,
For it ie written ie the bask divine:
The dreshard may tie: ho,,. 10 enter in
The cite where Ibere dwells se grief Dor sin.
AGRICULTURE.
I1OW TO MAKE DELICATE SEEDS
CROW.
ey PlOYEsaon LIOOII.
"ilow am 1 to sow my (tower seed?"—
"I have had some beautiful flower seed.
gives to me, bat i have no gardener, and 1
don't know what to do with them." 1
don't know. haw it is. but my gardener
never can get my seeds to grow. What
11 dol " flow deep sir, would you ad -
111 me to here ter seeds?"
Hoch are the sound' of woe with which
r ears are Dot uscommooly 414111.41.-
11 information is much wanted in this
Het is most certain; that , endless me -
takes follow to the train of all vague dime -
ions nobody can doubt ? that Ned sowing
does d .teed soma "knack" and practice
we noddy admit, and tberofore we shall on
his occasion utter no ror a.;btr•"irs, buteut
he matter short by saying, "Don't bony
our seeds at all.
We can quite Imagine the surprise that
his aonpuocettll0t will occasion in some
ink? but we,preeume to hope that when
• bare bees heard to nn end, the roeom-
pdatful will, not he thought so psradozi-
1 MIS pps*rI 10 5..
U ID tbo first place, ask why seeds
alive coder clods of earth ? Does
u" stilt•, ipf►tp T Aad tf en, who
• her•(taye•dfggel Where the
I. jt,hsa, o eat of wriggling a
A gr he ,and when the clfiek-
•�te'l ily seeds they lie and
What reaeoos,tbee,
Mting themselves
of learning,
M , • seed must
et
lamina in or-
Iatru.Poee
of the Int
t:• j" eatricttild;
o pl and the
r1t ' third(
its front edge; but da not raise it all resod,
because it you do the strong current of air
setting over your seedlings and tbrouyh the
bole in the pot will chill them ! A. (soon
u you And rho seedling' green, mod plump,
and stout, the MODS may be entirely remov-
ed and tho pot raised higher. And very
soon that, too, may bo dispensed with, un•
less then are (rotate at night. Or bitter dry
easterly winds by day. In the former case.
replace the pot every bight and take it o¢
again in the morning: in the latter; it is
wise to place a little screen between tho
pleats and the wind. Fur this purpose a
pantile is It capital thing, but a piece of
boar), or any such matter, will do.
lm this way all that you want in order 10
get a hardy Iced to grow: darloiess, mnio-
lurae air, warmth: and alterwarde moisture,
air, light and shelter.
- Let no ono say that large seeds cannot
thus be raised. The finest oaks spring
(tom acorns druppod to the forest and cov-
ered by • few leaven. The Sycamore. the
Ash, the Beech, tho IIorso Cbeenut will all
sow themselves wherever their seeds slick
to the ground until a coverlet of leaves he
moistened by an April 'Shower and wormed
by an April sun. Neither have such sods
any difficulty in steadying thcrnselvee by
!leaven shield the Farmer, and the Plough de -
feed!
Send goldee harvests to reward his toil;
While sea?al joys and bappi•es. attend,
Let honest Independence oo him ,mile.
More minutely to specify, we rejoice to
hew". in this, and the neighboring townships
of Waterloo, Wilmot, Blenheim, and Be-
verly, that the crops of fall wheat are ex-
cellent, both as 10 quality and likelihood
of yield—and harvest we believe is now all
but general. Rye is also ripe and presents
a good prospect of return. Barley, how-
ever, is to general a poor crop, being weak
and stated in tho sloth sad meagre in the
ear. Tho crops of oats, peas, beans tur-
nips and potatoes, (with the exception of
the last named. which happily holds out
every appearance of health, etrenzht and
vigur.) may be generally defined in the
tow.blps mentioned to be only partially
successful, and more generally • failurd:
her roots; a lung fang is driven by vital Oo the whole, we arc pretty @a(0 in assert-
their
nus into the c�rth, and it is to that Imo.thatnotwithslaodmg the ton. sled of
impuarid, hat
and not to a ba of the buttal neck of the !vitaliser we experienced, the late
stem, that the seedling trusts for support invigoratinh rams have meterully assisted
and nourishment. in room!: L e aggregate productions of the
We will only all nee word. Those who present year, to a pmol nearly if not quite
h3 •* ever attempted to cow recd" open
allueul lbus ly co au egag d,age etherol1. Farmersbeing
`Ino
rock.vork know to their ;mat how vary ditTi- i market, the price@ of which to quote; tbo
cult it d 0.3110 such seeds take root. The chief demand in our streets, being fur bar -
method now proposed answers the end vest bands, at 11 per day -and they appear
completely, and it is tho only ()Ian. which a somewhat maim commodity 0,00 at that
to difficult case., does succeed. I:eperls price
credo Roberta.—fforticullurist.
SCIENTIFIC MEMORANDA.
A eemeet•that will neither crack no•
cream, may me made with a solution of
peralaeb and sulphuric acid, mixed to the
exact point of ueutral,ration with powder
of gypsum.
All beams have a greater resistance when
firmly fixed than when merely supported at
their ends, the proportiun beteg alt S to 2.
Lenz has ascertained by actual experi•
meat that electricity is as capable of pro-
ducing cold alt beat, *0 the degree of free-
zing water rapidly.
Frost cannot penetrate through a thick
covering of .onw, below a sheet of ice, or
throngb a covering of grass on pasture, all
of which act as non-conductors.
The wild pine of the Wert Indies, which
grows on the branches of trees in hot cli-
mates, where there is little ram, has a mug
which will hold a quart ; when the dew
(.11s it is received, and • valve closes at the
top and prevents ersporation. Often are
birds seen to fa.ert their beaks and Procure
water therefrom.
One of rho common methods of making
Nlaratua is to ■urpend the carbonate of
nausea io suitable veese!. over the fermen-
ting liquor to distilleries and breweries,
but it to propelled to impregnate the salt by
means of the carbonic acid from anthracite
coal, as a readier melbad of effecting the
desired sod.
The forbes of ci mpresion and exteoaioo
are equal within the elastic limit, and con-
sequently a triangular beam, provided itis
not leaded beyond that limit, will have the
same amount of deflection whether the
baso or apex be uppermost, and a flanged
Mate the game doAeetion whether the bang
be 51.15. top or bottom.
Sheep may be fed on horse-chesauts ;
in Switzerland the sheanuts aro bruised in
amachlso for the purpose, and two lbs. of
them given to each sheep morning and
eveeiag, whit!. at a time. They impart a
Iich flavor to the mutton.
Scientific experiments "how that the.
immature ot resistaaeo from the atrnoephea
is in a higher ratio than thet generally
"rived, •ix., the squar.►oe the velocity ; ilei
while the "metres ft N. veloyrty iaereami
end a e the ratio of 100 to 107, or 7 per cent ;
•d*a- the 045151anee is immure le 11se ratio of
• 100 to 116. or 16 per MIL
knee tjXwe, ireTh. phenomena attending the '!
1' i
qpi
I, f� Or osaag4on of life by yt►meminn 1' tit
eireeairy Mod" It po*et>rls to day at what
Q ' T im►f tinge &Iter submersion tM ►tla s .et
renuatation will be fruition'. la a bre
A
THE WEATHER. THE CROPS, AND
TIIE MARKETS.
At this season of tho year the @tato of
the crops its anxiously enquired about, and
every (imitable day is taken full advantage
of. We are now in the midi'.lo of the
Wheat hermit in thia locality; and thus far
the weather has been truly dolightful.—
TMa grain, as wo have already said, is in
fine condition, and an immense quantity
will be secured.iurmg the week, should rho
fair weather continue. Altogether, rho
prospects are very cheering, and the fann-
ers are in excellent spirits. Somo com-
plaint he meds of the want of laborers, ac-
custortnod to harvest work, but this is
always expected during the short season
1.r aecuriog the grain.
Market" are merely nominal. There is
nothing coming in, except vegetables and
produce required for daily conaumptton, sod
the prices of these rule rather higher than
Duval—the supplies befog derived chiefly
from earthmen and peddler..
We have made extracts from several con-
temporaries, respecting the state of the
crepe ; and the ordinary market report will
be found elsewhere.
New York, July 19.
Later dates from Mexico state that the
deaths in the city of Mexico aro 300 daily.
Great excitement prevails oo the Rio
Grande from Indian attacks. Families are
leaving their settlements in all directions.
Saturday wee observed with much solem-
oity,—hosioeen was .u.pendet. Among the
salutes Brod to tho memory of the Presi-
dent was ono of 66 guns from the British
Mail steamer Europa, her flag" were at half
mast and shrouded with crape. All the
mourners have returned from Washington.
The widow of (;e.. Taylor and family re-
moved to the residence of Secretary Mere-
dith, on Saturday. After spending a few
days thee, they will take up thou abode
with their friends.
no letter can put to silence. The " Resist not
evil" of the New Testament, common sense
Paor11405 W.nsrua -ro am Ifs+une '— moor interpret Aeeep set;" wide► n quite
After all thedelay which has taken place, acether tblog. {Ver k bad, but war d5 set the
find (ho final exerttena made W cavo tho "rout that con be. The betrayal o(aared trusts
111. or the Qiarderet, It appears (hit thin " worse' shrinking from natural respoo.tbttise.
(i•tyermmnnt of Maoesohrteslte end hi. 's worse, snail*Ml miry is wane. War a wa-
ebrktdan in spoil and rm.oae in its effects; 51511
Council have unanimously refused to inter-
fere with the conrso of the law. The exc-
eotion d fixed for the @nth of August.—
Thee soda the last hope of ibe wretched
man, and thee is New Eoglesd Untie@
"hewn to be she*e the tempering of the
rich .ab powerrfel._ Howtii en kip evertor.
NUMBER 1X1V...
From the Christian Easmiosr. Europe le the travel which alwsy@ mites to Toy many of the Clear Gel measure's we
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. • wherever a path f. rustle 151 .t, •od 'be ca5 have at different tine" ansueoced our adho-
doubt that, wub these material bond., the moral ranee ; but we have at the Nine time die -
and.
Cuw:aued. Le:ween nariucl and wallas wf11 be etroegtb-
coed, and that itis oeearws d war will Manta -
11 15 aipgulu epough, that, *ince the tint i.la with Me vigu1vao pluaecetrw of s►* arm e
comer), of the Christian era when Cbnstiau■
peace!
p ht beeaasr of thmr loth, tie a- A further indication ofsootet progress may be
christrsn satins of warfare should never, until
tM Idlnetp. *5. Lire bees fe,r y Lnught w -Sound .n the int.ree, which society is beginning •
Doted, Tee year. ago, wheu Pus the Ninth to manifest m Its weaker and erring members,
was urged by his counsellors to declare war 'u yauyerr wJ Ia nutlawa Oe. mu (rstahton
against Austria. he refused to do so, as anti. -
the
11.where+, a the uung•tioo of the penal
cnminq the heed of the Church. Thu is the cnJr;—tis rhhorreses w,.ich 1s felt for the ..n-
fiut iatailer, so lar Si we remember, la w1.ICb a granary measures of a former age: sna iedeed for
Chii.ti.a ",rapt• ion, taken Christian ground on
this au1• •rt. (..,vernmetus professing to be
Christian,'sul•pntOng Chriotiaa ieItimtio•a, herr
Ignored, in the cadent master, the Chrisuau
law iu relation to this poiai. The same gov-
t.
eroawuts r.i 1 toy men ,n fight. and melt whose'
business it is to rev that fighting ,s contrary Ie
she commends of God. Anes what is .peeully
notseeablt. coverumnota bring thew two ioeum-
14I lOLue. into iruu,cJ:a,econtact. Along wish
the troops whir, are sent to fight, they ■senci5te
preachers of the Gospel which forbids to tight,
uneoese.onv of the irony they ars iwrpetr.uag.—
At the taking of Magdeburg. im the 'Thirty
Years'War,—after We most misheard of 111051.
ties, atrocities, 1475 the hisiorion, (Schiller),
" for which history bas *o Iansaage, asd pnetr7
no pencil :" • game , in whish the Cresta and
Walloons of I'appeuheim amused thernarlvee
with throwing ivants into the (fames, or tnns-
ftxino them at t!.r- m usher's breast; after 30,000
citizens, mostly women and children, had been
pat to death: after the splendid city had been
fired ad reduced to ashes, only two churcbw
and a few huts remaining,—Tilly withldis troops
entered one of those churches, and a solemn man
was performed. and a Te Daum sung, as • suite-
bis acknowledgment to the Father of mercies
who had goose ,hem the victory. These things
are done to good faith. There is no irony intend-
ed. The design ier not to insult Christianity.—
And yet if this were the design. we use sot how
the Wrest exquisite satin could devise any. thing of their droakraoa, to betray dltal ttat TIMy
mote ingenious. Every enlightened Christian declared, without a diaeenung voice, their pada•
moat w,.h, Ihai, if nations prnfers!ng theme w rdsas to unlrsce an honest livelihood i( employ•
Christian will persist io •ioatieg (tittle: re of inept were gives them: but where was employ -
Christ in this particular, they may have so much meet o bs (se"? Lord Ashley eoslddo seth•
o(rea rs.ofog grans yet lett to them,—so much' lag fee mem. A distws prospect of emigration
outward respect for the •eactities of religion,—
was all Ile could offer. But what saw we to
a+ to leave the name of God out of the May. do meanwhile T" ,aid ,he thieves; " we mat
War mu•1 cense• says the political economist,
because it is retunas. It creates an fttexue-
ssishaLle debt. It paralyzes industry, bellies
homer, and mases nations baokrupt. Here
Moloch and Mammon come into collision. lo
ancient t mea. when the men of the sward ruled
the world. Die cost was not coated. The
seagae.n fought when their stomach was up,
lad let the people pay the piper. But now, when
the purse, rules, war becomes • question of
bnaoa. Wit! it pay? What will the effect be
on •' the equilibrium of the bodge' 7" And the
effect oo the equilibrium of the budget is found
to be diwtroue; and commerce protests, and
governments send envoys and settle the dispute
every operate of renibutios which is prompted
by vengeance, and out absolutely required for
the safety and well-being of society. It is felt
that the basis of punishment should not be the
pnaciple of exam retrib.to.,—so touch gutter.
eug fare so much criwae,—but 11,e priseiple of
seIloJ.Ieoce; in fact, that the 1115 idea of meal
legislation is not expi5tinn, but, first, security,
then reformation. The 1 51ine of which we
sped( is manifest eves i3 coeservsnve Eaglasd;
nowhere more mousiest than there. Cuneyrs-
t.ve England res that conservation iteelt, let
alone humanity, requires that something be alone
in thuhoe; and that society has ether duties to
the vicious besides has4giag there. One of the
most touching iacideets in the birtory of these
day" is Lord Ashley's conference with the
thieves of London. Two hundred and seven
thieve.,—prefeurd thieves,—a small delegation
of the whole number, meet and confer with a
member of Parliament respecting their condition.
The existence in chat city of a Targe body of men
who are born sad tired to thievery as • profession,
sod have no hope of srb.isie.cs from any other
moue. was nothing claw. But the formal re-
cogoiuua of such a hotly, a kind of toleration of
it, as an unavoidable necessity, implied in that
conference, and in a epeeist midstry devoted to
these mdaws, is • marked asp of lbs timea.—
The most beautiful femurs ia-'Ihis inert:hoe y
th• mutual goal faith exhibited by both parties.
The thieves placed implicit confidence in the
nobleman, and be, on hm part, took so advantage
played a firm conviction In the atter Inca-
pability of Ibe men who ampere 1ts lead that
party. Their aeweleee display or spites and
todispositiuo to take even a Walled werurO
:f Reform, such as Om Repreaeetatlon Bill,
as the memos of obtaining a greater, seems
to be utterly irreenneifable with the talent
to grapple with statesmen-!ike views or a
sincere desire for Reform for the benefit of
the people at large. TM Clear Grits Metro
to hold the position of ultra-radaea:, 144 are
doubt Teel t emeelyes warranted is assises-
ing the position of Caostban Joe Humeri or
ouch as that occupied by Roebuck in the
mother country—the ' pure motion,' they
are trot to be satisfied with anything teem- i
nable or practicable—they mint haveeeery•
thing brought to their stand■rd, er slier
omit oppose all Reforms—ell progreoa.—
l'hey must have the sieeir tillage or sone
At ell. Now, without making Inv epee-
cesury cumpprlsons between thelery sud-
den adoption of the rad clear system by
thein and the Tories, or drawing any eon -
elusions therefrom' a to the eieeerity of
the dewire for Retrenehmeat and Reiere%
manifested by both tem parties—we will
merely state the fact that neither Jusepb
Hume nor Juba Arthur Roebuck, thought
it beneath their clear notions to lend their
aid to the passing of the Reform B:it to
1833. Anil whether we give the British
patriots or their constituents the credit of
the support given by the der. -radicals to
the final passing of that Bill. we can cuoti-
dently conclude that the Radical members
—the Advocates for vote by ballot—univer-
sal suffrage, fou., to voting (or the Reform
Bill, desired if not to show an adherence
even to a limited portion of their platform,
at (east to keep well with their conting-
ents. ie Great Britain the people are'mote
ardent in the cause of Reform Than bete,
because their grievances press more heavily
upon them. While every man ill Canada
oao support his burdens with a certain de -
steal or die." i mrd Ashley could do nothing. gree of lightness—there the heavy taxation
It is doubtful if Psrhameat. at present, can de is a grievance that every day stares them iA
any thing edema'. Still, the (act of such a 1 the fate—every peony paid to the taz gah-
conference i' • hopeful sign. It discovers, at erer is felt to be just so much taken frosts
least, a disposition to help whenever • wry shall the proceeds of labor—blue, the taxes are
be Mood. 11 shows that the befit of society is not only comparatively light, but better
•wake, sod turned toward these outcast'. Hr- -,t-
sum to be borne from the actual
mann' has reaegeised a brother is rhe thief, and •oflsfe being much easier of acquieidos,—
is uaysilug is hos behalf.Whether, with Ai... .he
tle ail here therefore not driven to
istine iostitutiooa, any thiol was be dons to pro-
•ent those critics which may be regarded aa the Reiurm y the actual grinding of a systole
legitimate prtdoet of soei.ty, remain. o be .s.a. which mulcts its portion of tbeir hard sere-
Ooa Mice is °vides,; that is, the impowbiliIy ed gatherings os every stilets eonmomed,fa
of abolteniog theft actd employntsot, with wages In every shape wbie6 the ttlq o(1.gI.-
!atom has devised. Here. at lest, the free
light of Heaven is not taxed—thougb • 71.5
o, the beat lands of this Province have bees
gifted away to foster a lazy and assuming
priesthood, fur the purpose of furnishing an
since Wilt wfficieot for his reasonable wants, is fou
with rre,ities instead of gape. And
always earls with a treaty,—eiDee, after harass- the thief; .Sc, in general
(m the impossibility
lag awl tormenting one soother till they are forming the seal" of into octal their both
weary, both ;hues resort to argument at last,— provided for. " Parma," acid a Engli
mer to the pater of • flock composed u
od for
of re -
5e are
eh far-
t the
'why not brain with 5115"513, omitting (5e ten laboring peasantry, " why don't you pot souls
T
diens, preliminary corsage Commerce pro -
ipso your congregation?" '• Souls," said the
tests. sad commerce, is these days, hashes many eacher,—" ami without bodies? Fled you
a differ/nice which in former times would have P.'
b au oirreconcilable discord. The marl- aa bodies with buieg wages, and I will under -
blazed forth in irremoc la ark a to raise the limits I cannot create souls io
titudiouas rile that whiten every na•igabh sea starving bodies." (Westminster Review, No.
He so many while -winged meseengers sfpeace. 102 p 11) A Certain degree of outward pro's-
pleading with strati perauaaioo against the deep ",wiry is indispeosible to morel 'mature. It u
damnation ot a rupture Chet would scare them veto to expect that the hungry and the naked
atom their wonted paths, and peril with hash will ■pprecate the highest while the lowest is
hazards what is so perilous at best.ooprorided for.
War promotes civilizatioo," say the p5ilo- It rem -ins to notice that feature of the age
.ephieal emonq its defenders. li does so after 1 which is justly considered its toadies character•
teshioo. A first -rats steamship is eroSsiog the istic; we mean the tendency to material perfec-
ocean with a precious freight. Every thing Coo. If there is any one Leniency which more
promises ■ prosperous Tot -lige. Seddeoly its than another distinguishes, the nineteenth een-
fires extinguished, its engine stopped; it is takes ,airy, 11 1
s this. Other em hay. been marked
in tow by • man-of-war, carried hither and by the conquest of nations, but this by the con -
thither, detained in many engagements, and most of nature. It is a period, whet' all the
brought at last, pattered and dismantled, with ."fences are flourishing with extraordinary vigor,
damaged cargo, auto port. This is the way, as but, most of all, the 'sciences which deli with
it seems to us, in which war promotes civilize- material enure, the "physical sciences," so
tion. The ship is finally brought to port; it is called. It u Dst till lately that then have begun
brought in by a man-of-war. The only question in earnest to acquaint themselves with the
is, bow much quicker it would have nnade the world ie which they live. Thai surface of the
vorege, and 1. how mach better cooditios, had earth had been explored, but the composition.
it been suffered to marmot its course by its own laws, properties, and (anotioos of earth, sir, and
unaided powers. Or, to sae another illustration, water were aokoewn.aad soared for. All this
the ultimate benefits resulting from war, corn- is sow.zplored with an avidity which seeks to
pared +rith the evils it inflicts, are like burning dissolve all matter with intelligence and to oc-
down a flourishing city in order to manure the copy it with use; replacing the dead, uacon-
growed when it stood with its sidles. The sciose messes with -conscious mad and vietori-
ground is mate fruitful, but will the fruit pay for sus art. Unlike the individual mem, the rue
the city 7 War fertilizes, no doubt, but at what grows more inquisitive u it grows older. In
price T flow many harvests of peace must be the early ages matter was regarded Man iosole-
(atheted io. • beler. the loss isflioted by was as ble problem. a topic of epecolstion, bat sot a
be equalised f 'abject of ezperirot. There it mood, as ants -
We take se esteems groo.d ea this queStios. gooier power, a brute obstruction, the tborigi-
Wa hate absolutism, we hate abstnctioss.— sal, eternal evil. Man looked upon nature u a
They belong to the world of ideas, soto d aal• strange, mysterious force, m M tompro
ways false vedettes mischievous when applied to beaded, mach tees coetrolkd. 1t awed him
the real. A mss may gas .o the woe Nail he with its silent preeenee and moulded him whol-
es blioded, and incapable of tiidher, his way ea ly. The world was strange to bim and he a
the cath; and a than may loss himself in the stomper in it. Science, and the arts directed
contemplation of the absolute until he ie leaps- by science, are fest investing this relation.—
clotted for the practical duties of life. The true Man is co logger the passive 'abject of material
wss of the sea is to walk by its light, as it comes forces, but, le a treasure which every year in-
to as modified and refracted Sy thesatmo"pbere of creases, their truster. 11• is no longer nature's
our plaoet; and the tine Dae of the absolute is to sport, bat moulds aatare and stamps bis impress
work by it as it is modified by the necessary upon ker. 11. is no longer a stranger es the
conditions of oat being, and not to reflect it wrth, or science has adjusted los relations with
the eines•* mirror of oar metaphysic* ■aril it it, sod gi vea biro the freedom of the pieties.
barns and anthilares where it falls. Among To be c.Dclsded.
the fatuities which bpv.r roeoJ the path of re- _ _ __ - __ _
form, and to which • false interpretation of CLEARGRITLSN.
Christianity ha. given • swain; movies, is the
notion of mea-resisasa. Aeartace is implied
11 .aisteace. If *stemmas 1s a right. then re-
.i.tanee is a right; wadi? a right, then a duty.—
This is the roles .f the universal heart, which
Tara Sums'" Terem DEAD —Tho Parte
✓estreat ds5 DISats announce' the death,
iiit4 ease of drow.tag, after four hour, of lad.. rla.aegiand, of the famous Siataese Twins. 'on of the peace wrevement is not to enatedd for me
t 1 teed 64g b1* exartioD, eefmation 1115 so tar ret '1'b. 3MM* 01st• tbel ageordieg to the ilei• abetrastows, bar to do 'war, if posnble. them messur... 11 ie *vides& that many pototutent prove only Om spiteful and ran
-
etcreed that th. tedisidwl was able to sella Leedom Mdirei 'i'i . au, two brothers Ob. Dro•oeat{Os Si. war, sed among of them will twin test que.uons.t the next .nrou* enemies of all pnehnl reform amt
Of ataadia umasa"em d C,hrdsteadem Let dower 1 d if h 1
aid to min -government and tyr,ony—the
loss to the public is not so severely felt ;—
although the property of the public, it has
not been directly taken from them in the
shapo of tithe". They may feel severely
the loss of the property thus unhallowedly
gifted away, m remembering the blessings
which it might have proved in 'idiot public
improvement or ae efficient system of edu-
cation, but they do not feel k in the direct
appeal to the packet for • specific object--
tbat of tithes. For tbia-reasoa, the people
of Canada are lees ardent in tbeir desires
and less' clear-sighted in their mans by
which to obtain a Reform. The member*
of Parliament.are too often returned on no
better ground than that of haying served a
sectional Interest dear to the pante viewe
of the constituency. Then is • want of
nationality in our measures for Reform,
and the united action of the whole people
to behal(of a regular system of Reform is
seldom brought oat. The questions which
act must powerfully on the election of can-
didates aro by no means general in their
application ; the swimming of a Contributes
and the corresponding number of taverns
which necessarily attend at la a particular
locality, are often considered of more im-
portance than the Refurw of abuses weigh-
ing on our s al, political, �cultural,
commercial and-bnaocial proepeiTty. 1t fa
perhaps a defect irremmediable in a new
country, and winch is also attributable to a
low state of education, amid to a meagre W-
hitest by the bulk of the people m political
mattes. The coeatry is still young, and
w its capabilities are brought out, and new
soil improved means of communication o-
pened up ; new territorial divisions and see-
tional interests will undoubtedly continue
to exercise au important Whence to the
return of member, to the Legislative As-
sembly. But wo had fervently hoped that
this would have been modified by the pas-
sage of the Repre.enteti.vn Bill by subdivi-
ding those interest., and principally by im-
provtng the political (Jucauoo of the cos -
eutueuciee, by ginog them a omens of
expressing the real value which their oppo-
nents aro enitileJ to, lead thorn to cherish
Oo Wednesday (17th,) Mr. Perry's res• their right, and not willingly sacrifice it to
otutlone, for rho election of Inca! officers, every sectional object, advocated by men
vole by ballot, household etrft'rage, rte., fitted for nothing higher.
were lost—only 15 of the members voting Reformers! • general electino will be
in favour of the measures'. Several of the neon you in its ovular course almost mem-
members and part of the ministry announe diesely. 'inn cannot too won begin yonr
ed their coocurreoeo in put of tho resole- selection of men worthy si n•pre,ent your
tions. blr. Baldwin has now however, intermits 40 Parliament. Remember that
become disposed to retract bus formerly your members are net looked upon simply
avowed opinion ie favor of the ballot. The as the Repreecntatives of the sectional
Mere may be mus ie which war shall he • ditty. I progrese of legislative Reform will mohair* interoeta or i Townah.p nr a Ineahty, but
Advantage or so adraotags, gain or rain, it nay be found too slow for Prone of thn mere rho- ase the embnddmeate of your enol sad d.*pse•
be a duty. Though it involve the clearly len- roogb-going Clear–Grits, w ho Nem to be .innate pnluiical Jud5ea0. l:hoo.. Inc
sees onnihilnnos of the wf*bss piny, a nosy be dneowed 10 "go low whole log or anlhung." yourselves men fit to SDA o hint,,
@day to tae• the ewo.ety of peruhtig by 15, 1: to rb • 100 much (0 ex;lect that Rn -
swnrd And when inch a nee occurs, it will
M valiantly lo tee ., ao l march m( ►il(b1, fres-
sot bq (roar 1st hewer d (y.ristse pri$eiple teas foram'Flitch ere of each reocot origin in•ol- dose and pro/freer, and limy* to their native,
a nation refuses ta fir
but beta tie want d- ving rather important changes, and which iwigmbcane the nMco-.1te hers who dewro
any woe,* stress Nesgh (,,r that pnrpoea.— have u yet been but little discussed by the your iflean ea oe the ironed of Inst inter
1 should beattained t
It u set that war d sewer Warfel, Mt Oast the ;bite •t sage, s oar a ecce.
origin of war is always a mime. The tree nits- o • new election we most tract fn a great este, simply to forward their misplaced sm-
for the bell eacees of many of hitien—mco who tried in the fire of J;sa,.-
e hist". thea a mevesmvg A Nei r rtsan s genera election,au the people ware
nation proved whet htpi•ben seentautly eta emoloy her 0(10,000, Fiance and Aorta their truly represented, wo might predict their nal progress : Reform hie nnexpeetedlr
Sip 6p) .and aY0,000 able -boded mco, liv.ng at , foiled ate r*emMs m the ultra -reform mom e ,
p d ,sell. ,1MIfMt MMt y d 1 thatte�..1 able y Mt Aa h y a •war with brutes matter to *wt ip,mg Ilw have H everrhot their mark,
alga+ 1 1, tl pts 11 e6oele the 'say hatatiem .f Iw rra� "dna of the bellow ligament which trailed Hnh ,s tenYmg mnuatuee la theig up vel party greatly matter of "mine, with the Pnr♦ mwnlrr.
aro ttFfy �s ts�ova them the an was pet'faetly trumpeting the arise. -Fu tWt �a ttseo nau of h b 1 Ihd I S the R intermit rime g g
'{ Ila Eolith yr Ir• a far It R
f 1»h t ? , lee time dry ehsaatw th. .ky M of s ma. wPpmihd by the faculty Wm that the two nph
than we nay bel .5l it M t♦ ths�paWm apes@, Nprod.ctiv. ennsurlerr, immediate trot n h ea Ihn r.so,t Cl rho n.xl
AO.
r , an • eters i nu(sa of the *biomes
t. b aDM'al. But ws feu that the (lost (1st beta—tri the Reform cablawm—an.l.as a
r r in
i4( 'va a si ex t deeine emir,thin at (owe ; and belts."
peace el hie of ate. tf K the eke appears of a *411 deep" e.l•r . j _411°61' 61" tlt►t Ike li*ara n( the twiw war" kys; do unsalMns .be Alp., in conaeatrpg t11e Z II also—but we tnnfidkntl7 tenet that Irwal
Arecae( pw,osta wi,h tl.e tt,ad,..oiao, 'se that the? will yet rue the evil haat in
It l tell b hedwl "Lf half (dam t will .r again ave (t hestitity
Ii, h one it a tt He we0N a "Jewel black. . ` rrsl aise..uu t►o Prrssees, by c•Duttea* w tic they consented to et 1 n t *pre
l►Mar huh +�!(seAt res t. Sal 13 r•Jj let dr: n k odl oo u rate la iu soo4ttun i4.11 1.11 W the roared. from 15, Cmstttuenr,rs—i'rrr. Prdr!
r
(