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Huron Signal, 1848-05-26, Page 2R It Iours ups kis face trying to kiss the voles. After there eighteen uuues,.eosne, THE LION. L. 1. PAPINEAU. safest effent—aft its imputed good allowed lope s fwd which, when Le is standing is as nearly as can be a.certuaed ; 19, Ce- __safest such u only the most perverted hearts eu easy pertwnaanee. 1 beliete I faulteree quiet ; t0, Lacordaire ; 21, Lameonais ; We copy in this numb., from the Quebec will wish to ezpersaoce agues. The young, • (tide et mint of tits prefect prostration, 21, Cbampiun, (the man "au maate.0 Spectator, an account of w hilt meet be especially, assimilate to what they fled who* Use Holmes, addressed me briskly is bles ;") 93, Perd,guier ; 24, Corbon ; 96, termed the late Paplaeau Meeting. Mr. their thoughts upon ; but what is mon ef- lerestek, myth', "Poste in, come In, say Clary ; and some names of tete workmen. Paptoeau, we regret to say, has re coin- (*Mien than details of crime end of public say" at tate Sauna a•.mcut esteudtog lits There is sumo doubt if Loden Rothe will mescal bis career as an agitator ; sad ata azimuthal" to fill the naiad with pictures of right hand tow with an InTIUog plat" bare sufficient votes to secure his *alum. time, Wu, when he profeue• to have cosi- M1 tasteed of beauty. --Coburg Previa. sad evidently etekevo"ring to isiduce mJ M. M. Louis .Blase, Albert, Flacon, deuce in the respondbie advisers of the ghostly 1'11604 to make short work of diving Rupee, are distanced a long way. Crown. Shelve is say, Mr. Pap:mem is Execution aT Niagara,—Oa Saturday at We cwt. 1 cuefws to kissing the Pope's Ciesen Sultrier, the proprietor of the surrounded by parties wbo, during the U. last, Gaunt the coloured young man who ting, before I parted Wath lila hand. Commons of Paris, threatens the Prost. cesdeac77 of the late Admtsistration, 01 was coodemoed for the murder of Yrs. Ile mnme.J atele began to speak of the atonal Government, that if they do not oc- which Moues. D. B. Vigor and Peptises', Mrs. Bell, was executed at Niagara. The United titarea,'sial M: was very thankful for cupy themselves with the present state of were members, were Its active supporters. well, iw •aye, "Ile was remarkably Bre the kind nurice u( hen which the people el l'oland, he will open subscription lists, and Tito osteoejble object of the sew agitation .td cat mposeJ, acknowledged the remarkably firpoems our country had taken—said the govern- enrol volunteers for the indepesdance of Po- is a repeal of the unio0 between Upper and of lou untrue sod aliributed bis errs to meat bad soot hors some valusbte book+— land. Lower Canada ; but Mr. Papneau's leadiog Sasts bbath-brdraiwktwking, draobtdiencm to Ais pa 'het be was alwayr happy to see nay coup-•anLIT10n or aL•vaar. supporters do not hemtata to proclaim that resled g." Us cun(ssed that tutees—that he thought the liberty and At a council of the Provisional Govern- their real object i •upetition. and a esjape- had been excessively dr'e•k un the Jay Isappiae of the people war well swas then secure. anent, held on the t3rd, • decree wadop- o with the United States. h is angular previous to the murder,—and that he was io the United States, kr. loc. His Huh- tel definitively abolishing slavery in all the •sough !bat any man of lutelligeace should under the intiueoce of the devil ! What nese is evidently quite familiar with our colonies and possessions of the French Re- be credulous enough to believe that by demon can be worse thss that of whiskey 1 mei/Alenhistory, and has • lofty apprecia- public. The decree le to take effect two such a nction French Canadian nationals- Tippler take warning, lest you also come tion of the cbaracter .,f Washingtoia. lie months after its publication in the colonies. ly would be preserved : and yet Mr. Papi- rider his ake uses !—Orford iter. manifested acquainuoce with the great An indemnity to to be granted to the slave- neau Is sparing no efforts W convince his natives of tee past awl the prusemt, and owners the "model and form of whtcb will countrymen that bis object is to maintain among the letter, spoke of Mr. 1Vebster, be fixed by the National Auembly. All their nauooalty. The Papineau party are Mr. Clay and her. Cethoun. traffic in slaves between proprietors in the evidastly not practical mas. They seek for la mac, figure anJ a certain brisk carriage colonies is interdicted from the day of the objects 'ebolly unattainable in the present of his person, Pius IX. renunded me of publication of decree. All introduction by state of public opinion. A small knot of Chancellor Kent, of twenty years ago.— hire or otherwise of Degrees into the colo- very young men, who are instruments of The cxpreseion of his coumteaseee is that sees is also forbidden. This clause is mope- Mr. Papineau, imagine—like the "Toole] - of sadness and anxiety; and this, 1 thought, cially intended to prevent the totroductioo street calors'—that they are the people of was especially manifested when an allusion of Degrees from Senegal, by any "pilau Canada. We beg of them to recollect that was made to the reception of his new con- similar to that of the Hill Coolies in the there is such a place as Upper Canada, and antenna : and he replied : " It is very dd- English colognes. that Upper Canada members will not be Beull to provide fur the wishes of all,—in a TUE oecnrtaa or oaLR•ns. found to consent to the virtual disfnoehiee- case s0 cutuplcx a committed to my charge. We read in the .ifessager :— if of their constituents. Mr. Papineau, - 1 have moat at heart the spiritual interest of r, A lady of Geneva, who is a friend of the if he bas reflected for one moment, must De ee people, and what bas now bees done 1 Duchess of Orleans, received a few days aware that, under the existing constitution, hope .may promote that, se well as their ago, from the Duchess, a letter which con- he can never expect to carry his views into temporal happiness." Soon after this, we tains, among other things, the followin¢ effect. Doss lee expect to get a store lies- rattook our leave. Hid ilrhness gave me bit word. : '1 deplored at brat the unexpected constitution from the Imperial Govern- took again, and obeying more the impulse Revofutrnn of February, and wept over tie mint, against the advice of the Canadian of the moment than the etiquette of the terrible fall of those who.were dear to me ; Parlumeot ; or does be intend to get up a I Court, 1 gore it a rather smart republican I regretted at Ent for my son the lots of little Canadian revolution/ We are for shake, whereat I thought, the Holy Father the tient crows in the world ; but now I Prodigal Immures of reform. . sr took no offence. Pius IX. lues in the had rather see my mos dead than hope for We should like W bear from the organ of — — most frugal way, and beatow•e all his income Irim an early return to France or dream Mr. Papineau bow he intends to carry his on the poor. I cannot help feeling great that he might one day -sit upon a throne views into effect. He may possibly hare it respect for him, and I before him to be a which is forever impossible"' is his power to injure bis countrymen, and 14411.18 sincere and devout man of God. to prevent their obtaining a great deal that x H. The American system of popular govern- THE LOSS OF IRELAND. would be of essential .mortes to them, but ment se the study of enlightened men in this —_ it is quire obvious that he ha it not in his NUS part of -Europe. The late argument of Mr. England could afford to lose Ireland. power to serge them by adopting tube punct u0op7S' eVebster befure the Supreme Court of the Such a loss might, indeed, involve an im- of which he nae given • prograa.se os mors v en United States, in the Durr case; which em- mediate and temporary damage to her occaeione than one. mud Mj braces an admirable and characteristic ex- position el tlw "abject, has been translated prestige. Foreign nations might misunder-That Mr. Papineau has talents of a high stand our purpose and predicament. But order is admitted of al: Ands—that he is into the Italian language by a very distin- we know and feel that our national loss— an impracticable man, as a politician, has gut.heri gentleman of Bologna. the rum total of loss sustained by England long been asserted by his opponents. We iitet Mr. %Webster'■ fame as defender and ex- —would be ferreuvo. We should part have been disinclined to believe the truth pounder of constitutions would, if he were with the sore and gangrened limb of the of the assertion, but certainly the present un this side of the water, ensure him full empire : the empire itself would suteive attempt at agitation against men in whom employment in the making of such docu- sound and whole. But Ireland herself, he professes to have confidence, would **leets. A recent traveller in Austria re- how would she fare 1 Barred for ever lead us to the conclusion that Mr. Papineau eit cords that he was received at the Court of more from all share, title, and interest to is a very unsafe guide. Up to the present sIW Vienna, and had the honor to sit one day and in every element of British greatness, time, however his success has been small SOM.by the side of Metternich, at dinner. every source of 'British affluence, and eve- indeed ; and having a bigh respect for the The Prince said, there was so much talk ry symbol of British sovereignty, on ,her mawe cannot help feeling mortification of conafitulioa-making, it might yet become would fall the curse of feeding the inter- wn,hen we find him placing himssif oD a level n distinct profession in Eurupe—that when twine struggle of domestic faction, and with Barney Devlin.—Pilot. Ali Pacha, the celebrated rebel, raised his bleeding beneath the conliuuoun wound of standard against the Sultan, he received a agrarian outrage. lwltk, letter from hint, in which after some compli- The overplus of her poor—high-born menta Ali Pacha proceeded to the business or low-born—of Celtic or Saxon blood— Caoll of the letter, which was a request that would be absorbed back into the muddy Metternich would select for him the best and turbulent whirlpool of a conflicting Q$ constitution maker he could find in Europe, and long -desired provincialism. She would «)) end send him over to the Pacha forthwith, shrink at once into herself—a petty island, the ER as he intended to govern the country he torn by the fierce feuds of partizans, who Prey* was about to wrest from the Sultan aftt<r only were not venial because there were IAS moot recent and most approved models. none to buy them, and the hungry strug- The Prince said, that being on friendly glee of wretched peasants who had no terms with the Sultan, be with obliged to landlords to oppress them, because their decline the commission. There will pro- Republic had abolished poverty in its in- n bably be a job for somebody in this line of auguration. for business before long, nearer to Vienna than So much for the balance sheet of profit the the Court of the Sultan. and loss. It is a question for you eepeci- Mtand bally, gentlemen and peers of Ireland, to I Timber CWS .tell OrCambria.decide whether you will still be members hamof a great and mighty empire, or dwindle 04 l.IvearooL MARKETS, 28th April. into the proscribed and suspected citizens tN Tbere has been more demand for of a poor Republic. For lay not the Aat- 1ts t Bread.tuffe the last ten days, and a good tering uneaten to your breasts that your -1 deal done in Indian Cors fur Ireland at 26s dieunien will be aught but a Revolution, ( a 296 per bbl. '!'here was an indication of and that your Revolution could bring about i of ler some further improvement, but the demand aught Save a Republic. For you and your Miss of tJ became less active to -day and buyers have order there is but one hope,—a steady ad- • be oat rather had the advantage. Flour in fair re- heretic° to the English Crows. It is not on th quest and steady at 270 a 285 6d per bbl, for you to die and make no sign. Already rod Sour les a 25e. American Wheat 6s in England your compatriots have spoken. tb' b gbt 9d a 8a 3J per 70 lbs. The general stocks They have declared their loyalty to the Pastime = In this port are moderate, and the posaibili- throne and the empire to be unshaken. ty of supplies from the Bultic being inter- Why is the loyalty of Irish rank, property, a tupted has probably some influence OD and intelligence mutes 1 Be warned. To. don holders. Carolina Mice les 6. a 17. 6d be Filent is to be indifferent. To be indif- per cwt. ferent is to be lost. 1Ve know no medium — between Irish neutrality and Irish hostility. 'IRELAND. Fret us with the one and disgust us with On Friday night tbere Was a general the other—and we, (be people of England mea dog of the Confederate Ceiba in Dublin. cant you off tort avaa !—Front the Londow The attendance was very numerous ; and Times. among other things, it was resolved to pro- ceed with the organization of an•anned National Guard. et manifesto to this effect was drawn up and signed by nearly every person present. inn the meantime, the executive are actively engaged in preparing far the contest, which it would appear is not now fir dis- tant. The 2'1rd May is named by tome as the day definitely fixed on by the leaders of tee rebels for their outbreak. FRANCE. lastest advices from Paris state that the election returns from the sections, as well as from the departments, continue to be most sati.factory to those wbo desire to au the moderate party represented in the Provisional Government by M. Lamartine, prevail. In almost every arrondissement In Paris, M. Lamartine had the moderate parry in the Government head the lists, and throughout the departments the commis- saries of M. Ledru Rohn ate at great dis- count. The intelligence fad produced a very sensible improvement in the money now kat. It was reported that 61. Albert had gone over from Rollin's to I.amartine'S party in the Cabinet, and that M. l.edru Rollin ova only waiting -for the meeting of the National Assembly to resign his post as Minister, without waiting for dismissal. The esammatrons of the votes to the sections proceeded very slowly yesterday, and it is mu4h feared tbat all the examina- tion ensued lbe finished ibis evening. To- inorrow at 12 o'clock, the sections will meet their respective mains., to exeml0e the mites of the arrondissements, and this ca' - not ba des. sy1et*he evening. The general eaaoaro.tioa will take place on the 28th, at the Hotel de Ville, and it is expected that the gets•rat result will be known on the nor motet tie ttiti. '•IoM weans .sawmtsed op to this time ghee •• fetishsg •.pasty in the following or- der ; 1, Ie.sa$lme : 2, Dupont de I'Lure ; :t, Osheer Pam• i 4, Angn ; 5, Marmot; 7, DMA most ; 11, (.erse.nia ; 9. Causal/fore ; to. sores gst , 11, Crernienx ; 1 S, leeches ; 1 je (;gs,.Ytus - ober f 14, Canoe ; 16, Berger; thy. Motets ; 17, t;aeai nee f IA, I,amori- csen. They have all a. lomat 100,000 Noysti II. ma assa ➢L . mss ►O ilia Tan LAST Gar'.—Upon this bright day, eland with me 11. you would be rick of humanity, and look over the 'nettledo of mem kindly gathered to see a murderer hung. At Int a guarded cart drags on a thrice guarded wretch. At the gallows ladder his courage fails him. His coward fret rehire to ascend ; dragged up he is supported by bustling officials ; his brain reels, bis eyes swim, while the mock minis- ter utters a final prayer by his leaden ear. The prayer is said, the noose is fixed, the s.gnal.is given ; a shudder runs through the crowd as he .wings free. Alter a mo- ment his convulsive lamb. stretch down and hang heauly and still ; and he who began to gamble to with. out a game, and ended with stabbing an enraged victim whom he had fleeced, has here played his last game—himself the stake !—RC. If. W. Beecher. the made* el bee two iafeal, was aegaitted, drawees times emu. -Mien Is taIsllewa p . sothieg rowan be owan Mabeebet hinted* lesser m—" O•atletttem, W,, t .' "h av,e isvesaed the e feet that she hod hoes the soother of with pewee as awn asest swo* we ed potloy touaa far the the people. *be Inuit* sad Tiere were a somber .r civil eases deetdei i Y►.wgy pay tee, ler est ssitpeoltrthlgit some al them co.sidsrably irpsrtass, bet as we noes 1 Mos a w Ii. vfrbm. of tjj e. "asset see either the juetiew es "ditty of mutiny pie who pay arm ir.Used w thwmetiar Whored capital wet of the boohoos usaaeuss• policy to•roam! sf root power, aad that ,. of private individuals, we knew eel feed"' ,aloe* ieuasiirfkblrlsoreeeed by . PesiUao notice of them. whisj you •seer 1 the 311. eapetrtlt cher+ fee/f we regard it.a a dot hib1 we awe to the PROS C 1R I! T I O S. N6ters sad a unialvs pmto remove . from woe --set braises you w m Soetohos, or Irish- - We would as tkisk of shoes dews seriwedy wee, w t ghehmes; set bseeaoe yes are awn. to write as stuck en this beg -bear, wen it eat ben Of 1510 r that Chee►, aur buses* yea be- dsit No much u.seser ted eons bee bees sl- 1.0. I. this er Ye1 ..deet—bei simply become ready throws forth *pea the subject. We he- fee alien give Via as adfffis el iodisesee, Revs solemnly Shot every titer is optative, hew- wbleh you .5sm deeertmintrd to masa apfsst tie ever undies the *object may be, will operale la- butanols sad Mini et thou who pal yea 1"— jeriomsly as socwsy, end, therefore, we tbisk 11 What impditie et esjset piseipts weld he le- is the duly .1 every esu to inert his inkk- volved is eseb-oosdutt We de mas by nay eace in pre.estieg the dissemiaaties of false im- rrteaas reeaomeed et tants' *Pia maxi *kr — pesatoes or episiou smug hen fellow creatures; 1a FOCI w• week cover Mn lbsyht d writing and witho.t promafsg to counteract the per- on the solemn, only ...eessat id the driveling aicioas heliostats rad the illogical repbsodids seaeesse of the Tory prem istreded evidently for of deugties malevolence, which have bees fel- the basest purpose. Aad our that we have la- minated over the length sad breedak d the pro- ttefee wetted with i1, we gids !t as ear opus!.. Put vireo ea the subject of "sad or wit►- the proesriptiou the batter. Toryism L oat the slightest intention of officiously aad gra- just as mach opposed to Ilse wishes sed istereMs tuitously becomiag the " Guardian angel" of the of the people of Canada se Repbiossum, sad public mind. We regard it es a duty to siert in plain feeder language we week just object oar feeble abilities in eadea,ouriog to protest u strongly to the pubhe oBoeo r the oemtry the mindere oar owe readers against the unholy being flied mitis Tories r ors weak to their bete of thew, errors. Whether the lama- ins filled by Yankee Republicans. Both we tion sf the clamorous party is to terrify -the Ad - upon aro alike hasrilo o oar istaeau a1 pae.est, mini.tratiou or to render it unpopular, the effects . Tory.sm u incalculably the worse e. rho upon the public mind will be alike bed. We tete for ide future ; for Republiouism would al - take it for grated, however, that the latter is tow es to worship as we pleased, and to pay for the inteetioo, and though there is little deegee -ear ems worship t bet the soul and subetaace of to be apprebesded from each as attempt, so fu Toryism is • 5aeiwsel CAerok, for whisk we a :be Goveremest is coaeereed, yet it is O bet would be compelled to pay whether we wotshhg- that there are individual. who have so political ed or not. opisious save those derived from newspapers, And believing titles views to be substasiialy b4andal 11o0n1 emoaromathn esewhocliasmcouparsbloisoftemded writ-. corr ,Deaer.ct, owf eThsi oryfmmtste am ►bat t ou area ,.ailsed101 is eery apout and i1n1gisef0 robe11 5 uauhTsory newspaper, would ever think of office, and every Tory uwepapsr that is sop- wntibg this prosmptiow .off for men who had ported by official patronage ,may be regarded ea ever etedied politic., or who we,. c•pnble of so much machinery, sopported as the paddle .z - thinking on the subject: It is, therefore, writ- prose with a direct tendency to oppose the ten for the igoorat and unwary, and is doubly public interests. And without seriously Moist - wicked os that account. Aad it is probable that Mg oo a regular exile of proscriptive policy, it the writers were aware of the eomparitively we would wish it to be asdentood that all talk - small somber of the ignorant, who either know ins Tories sed Tory atwrpapers aoutiading to or care anything about newspapers, they would receive public patronage are tolerated fed* so, sot put themselves to much trouble. The mass either as • generous aek.owledgerneat of their of the people hays gore far beyond the age of capabilities, or as an act of publie sympathy. Tory ignorance, but the few who are still lin- Their ripe W this patronage we fearlessly sed siring amidst its darkness do not know this.— emphaticly deny. Ther view' we think are Their position in society at present just reminds correct; if not, we shall be hippy to dee them as of Waebingtoa Irvine's story of Rip Van refuted. But it is 'either displays of wrath, mor Winkle, who slept twenty years on the moan- me, sot belying, nor brow.beating, nor eat- taie, daring which time America had become • illi. ear blackguardiog, nor lamentatiea sed Republic, and the institutions, customs, and woe. that will convince ea that met who oppose, opinions of his countrymen had gone so far sed moon. sod msllgn the peaky sf a popular ahead that on awaking, poor Rip found himself Government, ha,e a right m the patronage oe completely isolated, he could neither speak aur that Government ; much an anomaly rewired 1. think with the people; their notions and convene- be .l.eidated by logic and common tease. tions were altogether •niatelligebIe to him. He With regard to the law which Mr. Ferris trio - was a relic of the Poet. And in fact the Tories toted, there should be no each kw ; sad there - seem to have got to wept up is the dream of tore we would mach either that Mr. Ferree had the bacon and eggs, that they are utterly micas - been dismissed from the public mania on "nous of the program of society. IZ,eia ideas are count of his opposition to the public interests still of wheel -furrows and deet -footed Pages, than for the violation of is imsgiwy, r, at while mankind are talking of locomotive engines best, a tae,wiwal law. Is the one ossa, then and magnetic telegraphs—Bat to proceed. would have Welkin eta the last he of ewe, hod The intention of the terror-mongere cannot expedient ; is the other it is s nine shah. Yr. succeed unlees they can show that the Govern- Ferree perhaps pm fsrws d mon openly elms mens have acted either unconstitutionally or un- hie fellow officeholders, bet it is .b great soaps - wisely. It would be a wanton' waste of um to ,.!fou of fate to memo that there are not tea discuss the first view of the question, as no one officeholders the Provisos *1..iid ntr: v'ol•u denies that the Government have the power to the law, eithet directly or itdir.etll, which dismiss men from office, and it ie °sly the obtuse ferrety pave. theebsordity d it. 80 long intellect of Toryism that would make any die- however as it remise • law, it .beide be eakrc- tiection betimes the possessfww of power and the d and Mr. Galt of Goderich, shoe4f have been rigkr to exercise it ; it is in the right that the dismissed on the .amt day with ML Ferree -- power rendes, therefore, the Governmoat have respect to the low required this. As so tach a right to dismiss men from office. And we has been mid and written about Mr. Galt's en - shall now enquire whither it is wisdom or good duet at the late election bymemos who know policy is the present Government to exercise nothing about it, and as Mr. Galt dos sot seem this right. Judging from a competitive view of inclined to my mach about it himself, we will the constituencies represented respectively by take the liberty of asking a few questions, the Radials and Tories in the present House of which shook Mr. Cayley, or a Few of W Gide Assembly, we formerly averted that three- rich friends thick peeper to answer, we will give fenrehs of the whole 'maple ere represented by them credit 1nr a disportisa to do junks to s the Radical Members, we are sow conviseed gentleman whom they have esdeavotred u re - that this estimate is far short of the mark, and present a, selfisb, wavering, and enpopelar, eves when we consider the very large proportion of it the hige.t &gra. And first, Did Mr. Gall's the population who work sad my taxes. and in- brother dere all tie way from Toros,* for tho crease the vales of the country, and yet have u pimel, of preporenisg Mr. Galt le favour of votes, we think it is highly probable that Tory- the lspector General woes the electors of He- iser at this moment dos not represent one-tenth rot were wild to the D. D. D. Adrinutatlae or, perhaps, ode -twentieth part of the impala- Did the lead'teg politicians of G.derich appoint riot. Still we will merely assume that a large or solicit Mr. Galt to interrogate Mr. Cayloy is majority of the people are in favour of liberal a metier. for the purpose of secertaielsg isle Government ; by which we distinctly mean • polhtioal viewed Was Mr. Galt rtia6.d or did Government founded oa the principes of justice, he ezprer hie dis"ati.4ou.. with lilt. Cople!'s wbiela will legislate for the Interests of the whole views 00 the cameo (pommel Did Yr. Galt popelattiun without any regard to country or offer hi, warm, willies sopper' o 3t. caste at creed. - Tbie we hold io be the splitting poem— that time or was It attar another tory bed estse- Nine-teethed all the Tories in the Province d the field with a strong probability of wseew, bare no other political ides than those moused=: that Mr. Galt, for the credit asd Memel of the ed with the supremacy of a particular Chard', that cam froward tvit5 his warn, WJlisg a kind of confused, iodi.ti.et politico -theological mppsst 1 el tie Hos. Ia.peetr Geswl, notion of mitres and sveylieas; and the other kmowiag that Mr. Galt war prohibited by Lw out are labouring under the mental hallacies- five eaes"afes Ot leekowa ani iW tie s51.sl ties that Toryism and their reteotiou of office (need. d Mr. Cayley, kaowrfag Yr. Oda M M are the sem. thing. Appropriate the Ckrp wsot mmspopsltb. r mea of tM whets diMttst, naw Reservers to edaeational purposes. Transform 1,g ,yam dsma... Kr. Ship College into a Provincial literary Ismer ley, mew those a evla8ew and is the law of the tate, asd Canadian Toryism will be numbered law,pawiles McGell10usowep•syhis Egoist with " the thiep that were." The hike- Orem mule as *kenos sums the egh tele..,..' holden who wen part and parcel of the ding parties of the Rens Dimwits? DP Yr. Csy- iteelf,—WIo were made a 6t and proper pr- lay. sod his very loyal and eseeiterlemel Muds. sons" by the neet•*orpbooisg iafloeeee of Hise theist epos poles( the einem la the township Chmrnh Toryism, adobe for •short time, indmlge e( Williams, eostnry to all law majesties t asd the savory dream of the Bacon and Eggs, bet Mr. Galt, ratter all fils.sy was tangible experience would soon awakes thus. msavailisg, hasounbly tiaels.. ra. ff Ile Ws ml that a very lupe mjorite of the per w5. thse di el ed $5 M goes y u+,impwd . rile are in favour of equitable o the avowed wt : they ar the ssv.sms4 fes is" pe sheik he weld base retuned a p.rliamst ou the avov»d ewsdi- ss 3555 n Ib. esmtws ties that they would carry out the principles of re par rofetetb. be ►s. deq r political justice ; sad we would astern', export pI)fefk4 5ea1 that the people are iseksed to facilitate to the Sha per f W Obl hp G 0 ■tweet of their power the exertions of their at peWkly sod iserlea.ly M- Represesmuv.s. All publie offices er 3Lt. Calle! sf Mpivitg him had thWss esght to be, ler 15. benefit d the peep* ~ f>, oilier l5d•e•d M .rte fr hist t we IN sad the peoplefse thew .8'..a New it is them a fie a pr s se to rye bet will said timet tae the psaeest. 'nue we bav esh.d a Let, that all •Bee-Mlden, from the legal sea be awowored by • amber of ngeneh s area Crewe Lead Agree to the ledge as the bweh, le h, mad wit may nog gay It to sot eta and de aurora u este political ids..•., ant* to their etedil Ni slaw mese sash Befog .epeeWly is eketfea mallett„ it ham hese law- ie sumtsher the truth s while, dsetag the net fear ly asserted s wMt we •.said r seed authority, soothe the same end eetdsM of M. Gals bay* diel aloe -teethe of ell the eStte-holders Is haws uM,peed Who twabsd ted ANQy tea Curds on sJ..eaaes of Toryism. A.4 it thew 3gssd y er5e, .. `r as 1111.1684is- .tresemr st..ewe weshd een w k where tie la- Whet, snub peiseiple w ess"areed, mew, 5.511 paliey se lb* lsjstslos of tie G.'rotsest Md. entitled to rusk htghM ata' his show test We " A Stemma CLtuaysan.—A late number of the Christaiw Observer tells the following tale of an Episcopal Nimrod.— Of course our contemporary Tke Church will set us right if there be aoy inaccuracy in the statements t " On Friday tat, about 9 a. r"., a party assembled oo the race-coyrne to wieners a snatch made between one of the successors of the Apostles, and a son of Galen, oo the merits of their respective horses, which were ridden by their posseson, attired in full jockey costume. The divine proved himself as good a jockey as a theologian, and won, thereby reflecting great credit on his ancestors, the Apostles." But this was not all. " The hounds were in attendance, and in less than an hour the whole assemb- lage were in hot pursuit of a poor foo, which, after running nearly forty miles, was killed. One of the horses died the same evening, and all the others are so ill, that their recovery,"if not bopelees, is at least very doubtful." We should be glad to know which of the apostle. that racing, POSITIVELY THE LATEST CASE OF fox-hunting divine succeeded 1 PROSCRIPTION ! The individual who "dos." the Hamil- ton Spectator, certainly the most rabid and scurrilous writer in the Province, a slande- rous creature who never ceases to calum- niate and vrl.fy honest and honourable men, and to pour forth his envenomed hatred up- e Q on his political opponent., has started H U R 0 N S Ici N A L• another case of "proscription," viz.) glom - demisted of D. Campbell, Esq., Postmaster of Sintcoe. To the particulars of this case we now beg to call the attention of the public. It appear. that for some time put the Closed oo Monday evening. The only serious monthly advertisement of the list of letters case was that of Joseph Smith, tried for the remaining in the Poet Office at Simcoe had murder of James Cooper. It wan one of *hose been inserted, on the terms prescribed by numerous and brutal outrages which neee.urily the Department, in the Long Point .ldro- cate, a liberal paper. Shortly before the result from the effects of intoxicating liquor late General Election, however, Mr. Camp- epos the human brain. And the man must be bell and some other Tories—most of them care - wholly destitute of intelligence and even of the at that time and still officers of the Govern- eemeno0 feelings of our nature, who could care- ment-transported to Simcoe the Toronto leitdr•orharshly look upon the unfortunate chi - Standard, a fierce Conservative journal, pit q' ee • occupied the prisoner's box. He is and at once transferred the Post Office eatger-a-tood looking roan, with a full, free, patronage to that paper. Against this elect --count-entice, indicative of • warm hart, atrociot.e conduct the Advocate justly pro- •oda large amount of the social feeling. hisSeated, and brought the facts of the cap bead is fully the average size, sod well formed, under the notice of the head of the Depart- meat; wbo, after making due enquirye exhibiting a superior endowment of the intellec- directed Mr. Campbell immediately to re- teal powers ; and his whole appearance is dsti- pair the wrong he had done by restoring the tuts of that merose and withering scowl of ma - advertisements. That gentleman, how- lignity which uniformly characterizes tbedeprav- ever, thought proper to refuse to obey ity which, in cool deliberate malice, can corn - these directions, and, in defiance of the or- mit tele revolting crime of murder. In fact it dere of his superior, continued to insert the was almost impossible to look upon the ems Poet Office hat in the Tory organ. On Mr. without cursing the unhallowed age0't, which Stayner being apprised of this also, be, of course, demanded an explanation, and re ander the sanction of respectable ublic opinion, calved in reply a positive refusal to obey and • liberal government, com him to the iojunctions of the Post Master General. cupy such a degraded position a coneourse Mr. Campbell then memoralized His Ex- of bis fellow -men. Mr. Notmao, Qaees's cellencT the Governor General, considering himself an exceedingly 111 -need individual, Counsellor, i0 his able address to the tory, cer- tainly made some effective remarks on drunken - because he was not permitted to pursue iter u the source 01 crime. Ti. look datum• Iris career of injustice unchecked and uore- buked. His Excellency declined to into- elation of the barbarity and demoralising effects fere, and shortly after Mr. Campbell re. te Capiud punishment, by Mr. Beecher, of ceived a "walking ticket," and was inform- Landon, in his defence of the sefortonste man, ed that his services could be dispensed with must have been gratifying to every one who b. - for the future. Thi i. • plain unvarnished Beta. in the ultimate civilization of our race.— statement of the circumstances of lbe cap The Address to Tory they Poet Master has been dis- Senile, to the Jury from the Bench, w as the - have come to our knowledge. A full of good sound n, plainly andpopularly missed for insubordination by the Tory Poet expressed. We were, however, very far from Master General, and out of this the flame- being satisfied with thepbraze "mawkish sensi- ton Spectator has tortured a case of "pro- billy" which his Lordship thought proper to use .eriptton," and splutters about a "reign of °liner than once. As we intend to uffer a few terror" and " victims to its relentless furyl" reflection. on Capital Puaisbment, in oar seat, Mr. Campbell has got what be richly de - we will, is all probability, refer whim Lordship's served, aed we trust it will be a salutary lesson to other officials who may be in- opinion o0 the subject. clined to act m such an unjust and unju.ti- We think there is a sad depravity of taste is fiable manner.—Pilot. pabliehing the details of each atrocious .utra- gee as this of Smith's ease. it is a literal pa- CariTaL Pu'issiianr.—The awful .pec• daring to the vitiated appetites of the very lowest taste of the hanging of the boy Gaunt (not alar of minds, and eau have nn other teatimey fifteen years old !) at Niagara on the 6th than to familiarize them with the dark taschimery mount, is described at painful length in the of practical wickedness. •1 whichgoad-feslleg promises Mail. The editor of that paper instinctively revolts. And, therefore, weosly promise. to publish an account of it u pampkht farm. ' 1t U to be regtotted that -mas'p' Chet omhq t. mese wast d hssawy the public taste should warrant the es- is the evide'ee, aed ie eoslideraties of dome peon of this publication, and demand the ether .mrcentatene.e of as ":*sating eats,., wide circulation of such .ad details, which the Jiffy retuned • verdict of manslaughter, sad can only excite those departments of the Smith was mercifully sentenced to six muds" mind already too fearfully active. Those imprisonment in the District jail. His confine- horrid narratives serve no good end with most will be a tolerable apprenticeship to the glee the vast majority of readers, and editors should carefully consider the gratuitous riesa priuiplo of tall abtissss, and w. "et tela w .pon.ibihliee they assume in introducing ewe ppvine "1"eet will pere.ive *5. aeeerity such miserable companions to the private sf eesetvisg that spirituous Nears shall sever hose, oe their moron*, which might .lay agate sent their demon ietlesee in d"grease perhaps, be passed is the contemplation of him through the awful violation of the laws of virtue- 1t seeds but a thought to sbow fled ..,h maw ile nab lugs 6rm•e.e, sad he bow long-eoetrausd and excited attention ell 6.d Demmer.of good eon who will ee wee to any subject taints or tinge' the soul with fag to .ncoarier sad customise. him in the its more omisoue hue, to him who Man the m8isoee of outward objects upon the pis- mune. of vires., and we a,. felly amended .on. in their Ant ►est sod developemest that he a e.. of .hese isdi,ideele *bee rely than the strong shadow cast over lbs whole "after hes in total ebat,souve- ssmmunity by the gallows tree. Aod 1Y Th. girl Au Cries, who war ubarged with FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1848. HURON ASSIZES DISMISSAL OF MR. CAMPBELL. From the Kingston News, (Tory.) la the matter of the dismissal of Mr. Campbell from the office of Postmaster at Sirncoe, we think it but fair to ministers to stab, that from the version of the matter given by the Long Point Adeocate, the gov- ernment seems to have nothing to do with it. Mr. Campbell having thought proper, on the establishment of a new paper in Statue, to transfer the list of letters to Its advertising -columns, the older one very naturally complained to the Deputy Post, master General, in the hope of recovering the advertising. The latter officer, feeling that politics or political predilections should not be permitted to interfere with the management of his department, or with the distribution of its patronage, directed Mr. Campbell to restore the het of Tetters to the Advocate. This Mr. Campbell refused to do, and was in consequence dismissed froth office by Mr. Stayuer. flow the latter officer might have acted in the premises had there been a conservative sdmioistratios in power, or if then was not a prospect of his department soon coming under the control of the provincial authorities, it is not for us now to inquire. But the rospondibility of the act, whatever it is, appears to rest with lfr. Stayner ; and treating it u a depart- mental matter --am a case involving the authority of the chief officer—we think he has acted right in the matter. At least we will soy this ; had we been treated by a radical postmaster as the Advocate was by Mr. Campbell, we should, like him, have at once appealed to the Depnty Postmaster General urging the non applicability of par- ty political con.Jerations [ to the routine of hoe department, and churning redre.s at his hands. _ ---- A New Tacoea►rn.--A eorre.pondent of the Journal of t'omreree announces a new telegrspb, the invention of Mr. Bain of England, where the patent has been sold fur 1:12,000. The telegraph, it is stated, is capable of transmitting sae downn/ 'porde n ,ninets. The inventor has taken measures to secure a patent in the United States.