Huron Signal, 1849-12-06, Page 2•uth had arrived in Eagles& Th. Klee of
Naples hos cemented to recognise the
Mexicaa Republic. It d. (bought that tb.
!longtime leaden, who have escaped, me
ditate exciting a now Rsvululius at so di. -
tat period.
LIVERPOOL. MARKETS, Nur. 10th
-Cotton: further advance of jJ to id. -
Flour heavy, and in some instasecs63 low.
er. Indian Corn lower. Beet America,.
;slow, 57.. American Protislons to
nnoe'eras demand. Gond q e•lsll(s Prime
Mess teatt 1, Lard, 25e a 2'i. tor : o..d
Sweet in hared,. !'rime lots of Cheese /sell
freely. Lnn'on Money 1larket uolroved.
U. 8. 8:xe• 1-6 1, 1or',y.
CAPE OF GOOD [RIPE.
Advice' from Cape Town are to the'!9th
Atyu•t. The excitement on the cult in
question wasatill veer torr t. (he thee3w1
a meeting had been ho!.!, et W. it w•ow
Inanvnonete r•ar)Iwd..-•' That the Cnretti
town-hon.e he t,•11e.1, half minute tome,
u Bunn as the arrival of the Neptune ton.
''ICI elle. .0 3•(ertaleteJ ; enJ that tl: r ward
n;aat.r.,,he rev/wird ;inn e,1;a' e' : t . coin.
•nun,rsle the ahnvt to tl'' ren 'ma h,.n.e•
holden in their rrsr .'ive words. in nrler
Neat they may be drily prepared le earns
aloe Iv situ t.•rce the coot:lei"n• int Iht•
ptede e,"
Martin Re..'. t? q.. G irerner of Curr
Nreah, ha. jest died. Ile is succeeded b}
Lieut. C .I. B•y..
T*R Me'nv1, 01 CITY IN Tilt? Sa1.7 I.ARIi
VALLry.-Thu following tette-, from the
Sall Lake V.JI... lately appease I t:e the
Perryville (In liana) Eergre:-
.Thu city is a tuxlyd in' be'otl(u! t Ileo.
18eni!ee nn width. 'Thee hem -.r nr. prinei
pally built rel snf•drend br rk, are •rea11,
more of them barmy one room. 'l'he',.tvn
is laid out 10 egoar.te cf ten acres., 'These
,quare. are IatJ of in one erre and a mune
ler Int.. making ceche lite in .rep a ;•,are.
There Tote ens' the Poreet rug and the iP-
Fors,u.g. w!,sch Is el,l.i. The .trettn are
eery aide-Ihr r;ty is ahn.,t th1re mile.,
'gnome. I hare eon arrr the sa'k•y for 12
or IS miles -a more d•hghtfel place t
never saw, and a more prnetIctive not'
1 supe so c,nnr,t he found for wheat.
they have a Loge field belonging' to the
town n( two +hon.nnd acre& leech is all tr.
ore field -in rnn.rg,tnce of the rrarCi'y of
t,nher, each man putting up en ninny nests
entitles hit. In eo"many acme in the lie'.I.
They water their Ernie hy means of 'pruners. d
whir"h gosh nit of the mountain seeleolmost
w:thrut number; the heads of the spring=
being so h'gh they can conduct them to
any part of the vailey,
scarcely a pence whom it eosld reach w..
prepared foe it. The int tumefies teaey
of there had et Ire for ats.ed dagger wee
dgriv.d from watching., w►n, to the
thoughtful discharge of their duty, 'roused
those whose residences w.. Mown to
them. Others were Speedily seat for; and
before 5 o'clock hundreds of persons wero
busily engeped In removing flour, grain,
dupes salt, Ito. to the lofts of the buildings
flooded or 1I reiIc -t J.
hfuty theorised barrel. of flour must be
damaged. Various other descriptions of
nierchan.lue are mors or leu injures,- A
Il.'tequant ty of hooter hen been carried
our,, and a d:•zen or more canal boat., tome
of them laden. hate been swept from titter
iboor,neo, and carnet' .Owes the •treane,
h wag ba. Mow Mated the stfwq ed pones it
tis deed, the s idestry of she showy, wad ins
dames. of pea..osr 1t is probable that they
did sot belie•• res pergaavy est a the d.et,sew
sfbsrw/aseatraarw- We ely it rs likely that
they dtweeted from mem of thee. portents of the
•ulpr futb; bet w• have widest.* that these
J.J set ceostimer the common grimed ufd.ssenl,
became. tb, •' lienee fir As Dowd," sad •• Cem-
srMtuasiati II" of the Lathenas and the present
Er/flesh (hutch, compared with i1,•.tews of the
Calvinist• oo these potuls, skew decisively that
Ms Reformers were not agreed epos them. -
Besides the contending, or fighting, or dieing
a nppo..tt. o to these dogmas proved nimbimg,
estabt:.hed •ottiees, beyond the mere fret, that
1 is impo..'hle to make env estimate of the iodeuduale were sincere in their opposition.
chant aeon reach of the flood has .u(. Truth •td error hats frequently tete opposed
the aliment of loos. Nearly every atter-
'
weed mire or ler,, but no one aeriou.ly
The Lelia wh.ch have gore Cif with the
flood aid drwbtlea bong up safely in the
netehbortiond of Ibutton.
The tech writer peer.nta boats front be-
ing locked down from 'hit canal, either two
tab lash, here nr the over a1 'Tor. Thi.
oi:lcam.. considerable inconvenience and
with equal ural and equal since fiq. A mere
speculative doctrine u neither room true nor
mor. sacred because Inc. have fought and died
for it. •But the great pr'.neiple of the Protestant
Ref.rmaVon was not • dogma of speculative
theology -it was ■ principle -a fact in mature
who., esrstenee i• felt by every can• human he -
Wee, foe there i. a Jfreet deal of mere ham- ing; •o'1 the denial of it by • church, or by •
d.te w siting 10 be ,hi, to I meet, thoova I churches, cannot make it Ices tree nr
11'c le aro the! lite Muh.rak a rnuning Ices le t. The Ref rmere did not contend for
ever, sad toe pree.ere of wirier i• Merrill.- any pertiru!er set of dort•ines-thy had not
It pours due n era.. the I I•,J.00 with great (,armed mar agreed upne arty peeuh.r formula or
fore.
Ti;* Ft. on �eonl.-R'e I' n from the creed -they manmade.] mot for • fuith but fora
the `:hry,rrd !►•espy. t!;at the ijerw/uon-rhe ford o/ thought -the liberty of
br.lyes over IL* prin,y al ■Brun. in lhel conreienee. They dJ not mild wady deride ebur
nee!' eerie,eo. of Colekil!, •re '•!1 carr:edl thede0•triue of teastnberont ,;,a was tole rnr
' t.,v• N.. otaae•b 1.14 arrJrrj between that i was false ; bat• they argued boldly that
t1'e I, t . i w ni1eiI an 1 Soler/lay mtin.ing.
fr. tr. 1). 1. •air•moinsm._ r):�srny ,9f!us,
__ .w
BMW. . Ws bete Wei b.sa sppasd to the
erved-Iniih pr,ecipk, cad we are perwtdd that
If ih...!tilted. would girds ewe mad befiwe kss,
'My would escape • whole hoes of bitter dtesp-
poi•lwwte. if the temple rad easeepe ling of
the people of Canada, before Jumping meek ■n•1
heel into ibis flowery eIysnum tel "peaceable
auaeaauoe," would prat take erne a •• eaamae
the Adages," and enquire whence it came, we
feel confident that the •umber or A ;moots
would be but comparatively few. There is ■m
old l'coieb saying. Ilang them that has sae
shift, and hang them 'bat haeuwre many ." and
if the went .sof Cana1.'s weal are to be hanged
at •!I, they de.erve to be hanged for hoeing owes
many stifle Since last general election, the
one great object of the ton party has been to
put ort the present Administration ; and the
means resorted to for that purpose have been of
the most barbarous and disgraceful `eraeter -
The c000•ry was first furiously excited and
A"estei,eJ to be convulsed will " Ia'lignatrou
Meetings" -next carne the Gmbism of the
Met 'teal mob -house burning and hostess out-
nue-aesmilrs and common b:ackguard.m of-
fered 10 the Queen'. Representative—tinpu lent
and reurrilou. petitions for him recall, and even
threats ass, insin•ationa of murdering him ! The
lohah!I.nu of the Province emphaticolly dennun•
red and pot • nip to these savage proceedings
and the next '• she(!'' was the great con.titutien-
asking Leasee, whose menthess uoejllsel with
everything. and •¢reed npon nothing, •rd got
ihemeelvea heartily Iaighed at for their pure
ridiculousness. And Iasi, but not Iran, in the
train of •• sh fes" cern, the ' • 1'eaceah!e A
ChM tem Mate iso kr dries at, tats- hee-
ssI nil thew needful redeems be (htaiem'
without eaaeaatres to the Vatted Ststow 1
Ws aerwcr ow ! All Refern..rs well aa -
awe, yet ! 1f, thee. the ties scheme
enrhraee there, and tf a fur) testy of the
League go for the.., ohmic is the d:licultyl
None whetcr.r.
Let, than the ministry, who are pledged
to the greater port int thew reforms de their
duty. Never had they • better opporwnt
Iv. England to determseed to allow us lin
guerre ourselves. 'J'he Governor General
is determined to carry out that policy. -
The majnrlty of the (louses of Lehielaluri
are *efficient to bark the miu,+.try, and the
will only is required of the latter to clear
the way, and u.leer 11 open tie as glorious
a period a ever dawned upon the i
favored country in the world Let the peo-
ple "he up and du ng.;" reiterate the bent'
meets of the Sharon meeting; u.nJ 1 , finally.
• inure w.nn!esale male •of retVleving our
fallen co,diiion he neces.ary, the fanit wit
not lie at the Reformer.' d•oor.- Deed as
if',rdrf•.
STA'CL OF TUE 'TIMES.
lu these dull times, when netting kap
pens which a person can by any lngennin'
twist into an " incident" and when the Gov
eminent t.,lfunerindell of what puh}Ivitery
rrqutte. moat resolutely bangs back int
affording any neca.:oo Jur egnabb'Iri;, and
when the 1'd tors of cnnnrry journals with
r•ut+tons eves au,l reads •ctoSore, gloat over
their rxehanf.e, forced ro err all is bar
ren,' what can an unfortunate creature de
who's weekly compwlhed to make an ofTo'•
ing to the public arpetit., which. he can
in the Catholic w hither true nr fr'se, no. man should be compelled P � - I +tarcely exsect to tepee with the same sur
either to 1..!:•ive er diabeheve beyond the dictates lien" bubble. which, in point of absurdity, not Ciel. that NapnIPnti . Cook protutec- to Lie
of Lir own cm:relencr. 1n short, it was cot do -e even the hurting of the Provineirl Libre. ma.ler, in dressing the same .na'enal 1hr'ee
acsitiet dee doctrines of Pe hundred and suee t-fi..'h
e dies snrcr,airr!s,
Popery. lit atatr.a the nes. They Led ton little courage and torr lir;
' - iot der 'ism of it Mat the vel as d alt t ugh to her are. aware
t eati+(.tr-
r' y "peps• -+ted." And frith in t1,, own influence to come out boldly Linn, and although we are, aware that mann
}j. thio poo,oe:r, whit n el.ros.d, for tie. Not, like rent Revolutionists, and say, '• Ann,Jetenn o.,J thin_• era: •well Lrnr re .ehtinn ae11 these w.,-
.,
rant the tight res d' nr ,ey cur not aced I !
11 I H t S 1 tt .1 r .Ic an equal rieu Government of oppreevu,n or tyranny tower:M I I -ie. the rola wilt 'not to i:k wit! re aird to a
- - lato Liras just as mesh as he' pleased. And when •Ite eelenn-but they c.:rw oat .._ , _sly for new"owfw'► arhictt regnnee to I .. to rifinJ
J: t ees.or room the t'n�mas of rh or They Oared the II r,nnnt I;are inn much of them res proalt
N.
t Chnrrh, ■(!nerd
TaI'R:::.11 I in thea reireeet, will not be rep ar
f.rn.o,II Awoeia'ioes, A!:iaarea• Secret Socie• end an efferoon:e attachment, and sialine to . p ett other -
1
• we bear rel men. falling t.ern.ehe. Protestants, p•ace.b!e.nn•a.rmn "' avowing!are loydty, I !hat the Piddle hunger a!th•,,ie'h vnraciuua
', DECEMBER G tga9
Ti1E PItINt IPLES OF TIIF. PROTES-
TANT Itf-Fif LMIATION,
• THLI L was a time when the thing Balled Free-
dom hod oo abode among the children of teen -
�Iankled teem to Love entered into • sort of
rentonl understanding that t';ry would live it
hr•Idum. T!te.mind 0l here few was slaviahly
roauateJ to i}. any -saris, proverbs, dogmas and
.orale: of •n igoorent, sup.rrtitiues ard pre
umptuous generation that 1 1 gone before -and,
f il.-• mine night be supposed to pensees mend,
t was grovelingly subject to the arrogant intole-
aoce of the few. There was no freedom of se -
ion -no freedom of speech, and even no free-
om of thought. Men's boJeee were mere chat -
le property, and their Fouls were only a kind of
nr• to amuse a grossly ignorant "sed deprived
rie.Mrard. All human hope was centered in
idle tnteke'3 and tin.elryp and all human fear,
ere found -d on bole -bong and raw -beads -and -
tacitly -tones. Righteousness consisted in the
.vote observance of little chilJteh formalities,
us, the avowed belief in little improbable tales
1 ghosts, Moles and miracles; cod iniquity
eant the exercise of thought, the reluctance to
ori to despotism, and the neglect of the
'Melly and wages of the priesthood. In short,
en had forgotten that they were made io the
mage of the Eternal, and the Devine fire of in-
Ilrci lay smoulieriog in the rubbish of mystery-
.neki•g ignura:rcr.
GaLtLao, s native of Pipa, w whin the
•a
I saw is my wake. wheal Drat the set-
-t!ere say will yield So buehele. to the acre".
d belist•e if any w1 eat will de it this well.
it is about the height ref• a man's head, and
as thick as it ran stand. In this flesh there
in 5000 acres of wheat, 1000 acres of corn,
the balence is not cu'ti6ateJ- 1 naw' pare•
p
where a man cnu!•1 cradle four miles ee
through wheat an high as les I rad, with- b
net turning to the right nr left. They
have more wheat than they will cut, fir the d
farmers cannot cut it, There is a lot of a
men about the ramps who wend ] rather o
skin end tr,fficl round, than work for fit.S in
SU
•u
m
Der day. They are now in the nutlet of
Asarco, 1 a a. offered five dollars (in gold
duan) per day, to cradle, which poen cur-
rent here. There is a settlement 50 miles
from this rirv, of men owning negrors,
carrying on farming trigs/5. There are
warm Perinea here, which the inh:b tanta
say are very healthy to bathe in; for a per-
son rot lured to it,' it to nhn-i't too ty•trm:
On the 94th of the nmt'h they have a greet
relehration, it be.ng the monl'i on wlie!i
the 'nen arnved Who rut the road. The
population of this Valley is 6000.
LIBERIA -The rrpuhlic of Liberia, at with the opinions of the church, sad for his re
present, seems to he in a flourishing condi- pre
Ie
Ihnn by • great vane'', of &mime;
ties, hr., ter the
p..t•nv of cra•hn¢ Popery.
I'raee dee nnetnry sf their avowal I.y ehakint �ygrh .!s:ntiea It almost hnthera'•s.ln-lay A�••
we, at one.. emu -role. that they are still in Nee off the connexion ! And now, in nrJer in gin.
(„re one res.lers, and this i• a gre't aJmie-
o gall of biti.rn•ee and in the hood of ioignity'r Ulansibitity to their ineensi•terciee. somebody sten, if the public well not offer,' us tiny en.'
+het th^ir i-endnrtis jn,t ■, pnpi.h .5 the Popery Its+ writ'en mmeebin¢ in the Tiiner neem � cbknte we can nn: n .g
itlhe ffeeni i rrnturr, and tont the light of Ibe em'oxlv'ng • dark l:int that Ilrinin will rnna.nt 'Imre. and the mean whelp, attnbnlc the
Pmus:ar+ R-f'rmu res !tri nm Jnwaed nn them. 'n Ptuvah!- •nnrxatioo ! it ie the Inc. 'e shift” Coneral gntientncss l . '•everybody-rr+indjnp
II mat, 1,. ,aid ilat the sr. of -ond if the ori. I. will only hear in mind that tar r own ht.stnesa " in eur men I:melee
yrreur:nn 'r P y
t'sper, y horse / mete 56rrte
new past -ever► man 1. chewed to believe and
wnr,hip a• he plen•es. It 1. tine that the tntel-
Ii mer. of the .c;!,0• dee' led that men elute nor
be allowed to make hnntre5 of each other nn
Rectum, of t!. , p.rnlar religion. nntioei.. Be,
them are other kinde of p•owettlionm which are
still. net enly int. -rated, hest pus tive!y enf,rced
by th. ter. of the land. And the Protestant that
wnnld debar hie felines man front the rnmmee
civil privileges of his country. 1,.aa.e he hop.
pened be Le a Catholic, or et ha •e -old rom:'el
him 10 pay nn, penny (der :he punporr of a ('hurch
whom. doctrines h' could ret be''.tr, is reno-
rant i•f the Pr'ne+plee of the Prntertanl Reforma-
tion. is, in reality• libel nn Prn.'n'ani sm and
in endeavoring in er•ahlieh that rime de.petiem
over.mind and conpeience, which the Protestant
Reformer r'.ae ep to destroy,
1 WHO OWNS TIIE JACKDAW t
WELL, afire a11. man is ■ strange, excentrie.
ad mvp'erim,• kind of a noodesrrryi. The
Natsr•list describes him a an "erect animll,"a
i' reav,niwg animal .'• a " conking animal," and
many other kinds of an •nimnl, but pertness
t a I n t
ie ho .prong (rum d:e "hes of the Parliament t ono ti einem wiereearhot any '•f
huild,ng•-shat it in part and parcel of the Mon- t ' l tglereeto� items of ii I.r the he 1..h
aa1 +,lures other j,wirrsls under the head. of
treed polis}, and that the nae olyct is siiil to "Street Roses, jl'trglory, &e." and for the
pest nut the Minetry and put in the tnrir1, it will .mnralt'v of this p11Ce, :t0 nem mention
perish like the •' Fhrfts" that have gone Wore that we nerrr had a " P.Dre Bopnrt,"
il. The Leaden of the Toiy party will keep worth mentioning, and air c+l•unne have
clear of it -they vivid .ppm.. it -it is intended nerrr to our knee I,. l20. starred l rctd•r.
for the aralking•botsa of next general e!eetioo- with any thine w nese n blah could! he railed
mu
a kind of sea t se than an Aesauil and Datteey, amt
pe -goat for the dislnyelty of the very few of them,
good old tory Saxons who burned the I'rovinciil It is porhape better far at! parties that
Librnirc-a new platform f ; .torn -out !orally: marten remain as the, nrq the town •eeme
hot happily it hoe rune ono .nor., and in (opse• to be rngaCi'J to more, profitehte business,
g
000ee u• very fl
. lens. nese. must evaJrrnteinto and theonty w•ay in which we ht,e ocra-
of
thio a'r" bdorsa-at general elertion. `Ion to sieve o: nor fell..v crus.:s 13 with
pleasure to seetne,the mart est thein Lundy.
employed, and we hers profitably to them -
Eli Ir will be observed by, se Advertisement
which has been in our columns for some weeks I ,circ.. The I:npa•tarietna of mods to the
past, that, iii the present wick. •large Amato merchantth's stores hive leen great during
of pectic work a sandsome manner
in be given out by the District Inca hicpakt art:clweeeak, anared dethe1>'ahvs es, in the d1tTe-
Surveyo. The Commissioners of theCaa!a
rent cs'ahlubmrnt., indea,tes an improve.
Company have agreed to expeo i, under the went to the taste of p'trcl.aa'r• to well as
manageme•t of the District Cowed, nearly three in the wealth w hie)) indurea the mode n:
thee1.n.d pounds,. as •nether ion.lment of the 0nn•ulitng their phrens. There are q innti
baliacce of the Public improvement money, stilt lice n( g.. -19,. un ,2 htthlm, an 1 nitro•lth.
remaiuiag in their hands. This large sum, a .landing, Ihr• nttn and Hord decay" of the
will be ecce Ly the 5Jrertisemeot, is so is laid aloatreal Alerchintr, we observe some new
ce,aice.hmeee,, which ecnn to attract a
oat in improving the roads in ddr•rent puts of
spirit of, living - ihn i;ht (ret.: descendent in an r' er.ilnlnn. 4".."1"
• . 1 •' .90 ern its of his pr',.,, r•
extra degree, nbnerved, aul thought, and reo.om 1 r'1 perm ae' -a es^ r n•i�e• .; -•ince we rnn'd
ed ti 11 he arrived at the coco:uerun that the a;.; v to him. Ila•
r ere of cunnus meehnn-
••m, and ceiit
renr .his &etieris.r ahilitlee are the ate
tatth was a ghee. revolving rolled the nun -but iof
be h■d thought oat of the bestru•path. Ile Midi most eerrno. perrinn of his rompn.nten. On
thought teeth, and this truth was at variance' hemp pnrrict4r penes there ore men n[ nenmr an
eytegiems wLck cam oNelac* them that It
's say advestage to pay N per mot more
for eN litxertae *bleb limy uta than they
eould bay thews IMO fes oe the ether
ewe of the laws. Very reosul he persua-
ded that aw it acv way improved, because
II cotter more than throng , ur neighbors. -
They wilt con' inne to compare the txpen-
rte of bring gusereed on eha and on thu
other este, cten (hough dual should mutt
liburell, be throe/nig their eyes. We seo
but use nay in which the Annexation move -
,ieut can bat plelely paralysed, and that
is, by minoring every real cause of cram-
; hint. 'Plc i eeip'c of Clint:a arc mot un-
reuuuabiu. 's hu► Oi• out given to Ilse
clanee. 'l'hev 1-1pc liriluh tnaiIuttiuLr,
ars, it ay nem en attached to Englandd, for all
theta e t., cow., if a pro,..' rumree he pursued.
That to rue dura int ' ri,j*t In demand!) g
!rota theni i sacrflce cf substantial inter -
eels it the .:)runt of leyolty. Only let the r
(mete' ted interests be made one, and we
pledge ours: lees *het Et eland hot!, 110 ce -
loay more attached thin CaLtJo,-Sf.
(',Ifaa(ines Jrcral,
Penn, the Exultance
1',PY ANN !...KATION.
,1f :r a", ,:c 1,'ie to that the period of
antexa';.n, '1 it be really to e.tme some
t,tur, t. ,rletant in the nater. 'f'i'at event
ran never take pare nil a clear mpj mty of
the pccplc of this Province are decidedly in
fey or01 the measure, end then their wishes
mm.t be t Intently rxlreseed either through
'he L.,irlature or L"n ugh a pniteery con -
,cute„,, calk't for are epeeist purpose, by
the ytes of I'M whole popu!attua,
:he wishes of the people Le rip .:Feed in
Ther mailecr, Fengiarol Carnot entertain the
nne,tior, tatsch 1 •sslrel(aae Ilec euheay from
't. elfeeleber'. It a ill mut be pretended
that the Prrsv:rctal Legislature aim. cone
tame eve r runts half dance aerexatiere•t•,
and by the metre! of to legal demise in
January 11,5!, it 11 not likely That :t will
cont:in more than ah.•ut a dozen mut of 82
menrtrn. The. general ell ctron, df 1862,
eel doub Ins. brine the aerex.'lionra'a tome
further accessions to their number,: bit to
what est: at they well M: aeoceireful it ie
im,,waiba to wcjw'tore •t tinea tome--
Phwtthey 4111 he an'.• to obtain a naj,rtty
111 the Lea..elriure, the moist eai g, one ad-
roealce of the awaeute, we pretunee cart
h:.rdiy r x,•ecrt . Muc,', hoa•,:rer, will' de-
e/earl mein what is :1 e • tie eatafv the rea-
+enable ex;,•ctatbins of Cie Cnum►r'. in the
int••rau, 1; in Sat ba oh 1 that ill the
h a :era ,t t.oi• Tory tarty. !are k.J l clear
.1 the movement. They have not even
gi neao Ile extent of c,m nrbeg. thc:.l-
•.-Ives fa Vic measurer elf ti,e I.eaoue -
Ind t!wueh that body ha. talked a good
deal about liberal rneasnree, while voting
ae.t net thorn: set aithough•lhe Conven-
t:.,n has reaoteed. In favor of "financial re-
form," 01 one'd the !eaten of the -Tory
party has committed himself to the' resale -
tion. M►. Gowan hie, to be sure, talked -
very granprloemenh!y to favor of retrench-
ment; but it is well known.ihat the Tortes
have seer. r rntrir-ted bens with sty (rader-
phrp, or any 1 r•intcr•nt positr"o toile Coun-
cils of the party. Ile stemma to be regarded
03 a very good'oaa tei d r the drudgery of
the party; he has been permitted to Je!en t
the T .,v intni,atry when 1 was taeapOde..f
defending it.elfe..And if the.'1'ortes ►bnu1J
again come into po'n.r, they would, m:•k•cg
hint A erlpegoal, throw the whole reapen-
'er:,rhty e f the I.Pa.•ne egtta'ron for " finest-.
matreturn" on Cur shoulder,, declare that
'!icy never favoured such '• repobt'ran "
srhen;r•, and Iaegh in the face of 'ILy'one
who should be fool enough to expect there
to carry any..steastiro of.rerreocbinenrr
w•h le trey nre•jJ.l nvrr Ian ( and
air .11re .f the bestnm.•- (5'r 'irte' tr amcr;
e Dretrirt, and o 1 have a gond effect out fel:y here 1 t tr:h.,t ! • e f• tvnnld deenht-
•rt S1•rl;ns, rep et frn�t:C Lt: �. est t`:r a L..i
the mads, i•.tt eon om the purses of some el lay w 1 t the f. ' c .r Inn .res-ce h
1 anises' :ct.!'as, at; hearts,/
if r•babnanu- t will he paid, Oot in little hits
Metric! Drbeuturep, but im good hard caste-
d will be of more real value to the District
than ell the vulgar dreams of annexation and
California. We .wish the Canada Company
would este it into their heads to makes hundred
!titled of good gravel mads throughout the Dis-
trict, even though they should put • Toll gate
on every six miles. We regret to think that
while every other District is laying hold of the
late vats. hie Act for the formation of Road and
Bridge Companies, Huron isnot making a tingle
move in the atter, and surely we can boast of
J
em bed ro•,Wcan be found in any other District
,n the Ptorince. - ,
Nein,
considering that it IP peopled altruist
entirely by slaves liberated in the Southern
State.. it hen a liberal ronalitntriih,
wholupome !awe, two n.w,pepers, rhn'rhe-
of venous denominations, good rom111r6,d
echnrl.. The soil Ia pr•4dn0.110 of all the
grain., vegetables and (Moe common to
trophirel climate., yielding of some two
and three crops in the year. it is capable
of prode•cing more coffee and rice than any
°thee eounlry('nor to it more unhealthy for
the negroea than .wee mer own country for
the whites when it,firot!trifle t. President
Roberta wan re-elected. Of Vice -Pres. -
dent there wan nn election by the people, an
the choice devolves unnn congress. It was
probable that Mr. !Varner, the present
.crctary of State, world he chosen. The
tepubhc has a anng man-of-war pehm'ner.
Carrying a neat little battery, with the
word "Liberia" on each gun, a precept
from the British Government Was was nn
.regio. with General Lew ie, the Seeretlry
of thetaTr.aairv, whit was stetting t!:o na.
tional trotting estohlishmenla along the
Iberian shore. Their commerce is begin.
mgto he worth looking after: nor did
rent Britain send their pnpitiar Pret :lent
d Purse home in • magnificent mans -.f_
ar for nothing. In proof of which i en
lo.e you the enpy of a recently concluded
reale between t:io p'rL.., showing that
hili "rhe Queen, God biome her," hag one
her bright eye. on the .npprep•inn of
stave trade, .he hal the other fisted on
palm oil, ivory and gold that. But i
wdly nappet that•wn tun .hell have a
ger in that pee: for 1 under,tsnd that the
.v. R. R. Gurley, the. champion of colnni
ion, had arrived at Monioria, ag An agent
em mer Government, and that he we.
f•vnnhly rseptved.-Cur. N. York
nal of Cramer -et.
RE.1T FLOOD IN THE HUDSON.
The heavy ram. of the poet few doss
tee retyped an uno.nelty Po Iden flood in
Mohawk and Ilnd.ne 05•1.5. The WA
reale rapidly derin,y Thnrrlse mese and
ttnttetl to rise Ihrnogh, Friday: Met up
9 o'clock las' overtime 1t hail not reached
e,rfmce of the pier, and very little op.
noon, were rptereained re regard to
future peneemps. trader those t.psee.
ea •t of the o,.rvhan'e eat the prey
dock clouted their sties.* early is the
int. in cnnd-Ipwl.eemeity.
1 shit water controvert to nee rapidly
9 o'elor k, end bef•eee 13 e5 rrrae me toe
and v1.11 rimer. The toilers of Mery
ei Doan Street tsetse to 611, eat none.
clerk vaet q'ranHlsee of gnus sod beevv
hand'se were rmh.eteed, nes tree pier
do the e.41are .f the .tune Weer itt.
mead I. tbw streets adpeee i t.eeete.
madden good beteg ssaepaeiad,
gumption, or rather bat wickedness, he wa
doomed, by an ignorant secular priesthood, t
rot in a dungeon ,•n id the crating of his own
chains A Wisairrv, an the cutj.x, • /fess
and • Jxanwe, werr•Ily tlJn't0ht, sol boldly
puhlishedtheir theuzht, that aay one man had
just as mucic right to thin;; as stay other man -
they denied the right of any generation to think
for t1,, generations that were tU come after it -
in fine, they declared that freedom of thought
was the cane!, natural right of every generation
'and of every individual of every generation. But
this declgntion wan at vari•ince with the enab-
Iiahed order or thinking, and for their temerity
aodalledgnl impiety, the Mirth darkened their
inellrctnal !Iii inrn•t ons by the flames of the
faggot -Gley seers burned at the stake
From this long night of inrnlerant onpereti.
lien end intellertnnl darkner., the Protestant
Reformation sprung up, and constituted • new
era in the J.i.toI), of humanity -a. bright halo
shone upeen the peralyseu carcass of society -
light mime roto the world -the celestial 6re was
breathed upon the dry bones, and mean again hp•
came • living, thiofdng anus. The psi les
contended Inr by Ore Prot -stunt Rrformrip ere
principle. of light, Ilea leve and reason. The
my.teries and tnummeiees of the Oracles were
exploded, end men, instead of bowing in worship)
to relies and rituals, tone op in the might of theirl
whole mal•, and asserted :he dignity and diviei• I
ty n( mind, In fart, all truly intelligent men,
whether they he Protestants nr ('.holies, moss
admit that the Prof.eaat Reformation wan the!
moat important human a, ble...mem recorded is i
the hitter! of ear ,p -cies -the progress of the,
utsanti peience,- -the nisch of intellect-the
study of mews nature, and the improvement of
society, generally. may all her legrtemately dated
fmm that event -and were the principle, thea
tali down and rnntewded fur, filly and generally
neidersta"d and erred on, we feel persnaied that l
the emeiriiy of the evil. which Abet society!
ifeftt, and men of brord faith, but there is, in
.l Nen man, a kind of general faith, which ip
of equal to any task, and it is frequently • well tried;
and though the proposition ens as big as a
Moorish,. 5114 n. herd •n rut nail.. • molting -1e
would hes wiaine to 6011... sad .willow. Snm.-
won't he speedily .red eIect•ally caret.
when we • r►r ones Lally tt end Luasriag 01
i the glory end nere,sneea of tit Protestant Refer.
msu.e, sed, at the ears. 'ime, we them mai- ,e
.rvely net i• ewer hostility to the p,inrfetes co*.
seeded fee by the Reformers, we beech for the l b
isconetetraey, awl willingly relabel, it to trio- I b
mete awl error of op,siii, ether than to an a-
'eetto.s is set Iieheeeetly. it s • sed error, atdj b
see which s •ste.eiwly-prevalent, ha imposer
Mee the R.brw'pn ewte•ded and fought end ta
deed fes •,star, pretense th-elegies' Dngtnse.-
Peekapa deity dol set "1'... in the theorise eft tee
sdsaiests, P •rdr ,•none of the pneathiwwl to p
iP.giye sins 1. hey steered the bowleg l dM
se toe p, add h ■g to .assts ata nerds 1 eb
•berly hag written eemethtng in the "Timee
i'newepaper amounting to • pnesr4f, conjecture,
Ithat the British I,ioo will quietly bow his ,.ne-
ruble head to the great advent of " PeeceaLte
tine," if the mejeriiy of we Cnndr,n
lovahes 5 e1! res decide 1 and some .other nome-
1 body ban aewrted that the Times newspaper i•
the mon;hpiece of the British Gnvernment.-
And upon these somebodies and soutethingr.
daring the last two or three days. a bin• 1, hhe•
ral faith hen eprung rep, erphraring an immediate
and a joyful nominee with the Sratea-a rich
dowry in the 'hope of Pnat Office emolomens-
a fair appnrtionm nt of innnihnnto pnhlic Lands.
end • large importation of Yankee Railroads int.
Canada a:y,feee! In short, we are all tube
happy end rich. Pole'? throoeh Jonathan's enter
1 prime and exerlinns ! What a lucky people w
are ! Only think...oder, of our teauti(vl coup
try teeming with the sources of wealth whit
have hitherto lain omelette and prefrless, in con
sequence ofnur helple000enp, all at once brnogh;
Mtn (111 Action by the genemna and unmerited
aid rt nor neighbors! Henceforth and forever
we anal1 (sed upon Johnny rakes, and keep title.
reentry Pont Offices during the pleasure of the
Whirl and Democrats •Iteraately. What an
honorable hnrgain we are abeot In make.
We norwlf mune he • migmatite port of a creed
tore, we cannot share in the plater, of thew
dream, orf t•.meeg greateeo.-we are one of ;he
narrow f•etb men. We se peeporal on • greet
many mil Jrets, and of MI this manesatinn hubbub
we believe nothing, pave that romeboi'y wmte
romerhiog in the Tunes newspaper. Yes, yen•
ly, we have smell faith w • great many roman -
lie sahjeets, and, on the tnhjeel of Brown gn,erir•
patting with her pnressrnes, we admit that we
h.p, no fork et an. We remember, some fuer
yens ago. that Britain not only thought. hot
•ctulhly spoke of fighting Jen•th•s •hi,ut the
peeweeof ■ levy signore mile' of • wrhic:move
alled Oregnn. lying sem. where no the esarere
shore of the Paeefie; and rtmernhering this s a
1ptnrie•1 flit.;, the man whe would wah .s in
,hi..e that a same Britain has, in the short
spare rd fuer years, •hoots, sup, m far got rid of
er fighneg propene:tica, a t0 abm't quietly to
dee lass of her meet populous sad moat 'mere-
st colony, most &ippon as rot,. With envisions
sod sang'une in an unen+ymnn dere, ! We do
Irene in the pmgre.• n rh. " Pewee pnne,-
ten," but ant •n enihe"asrieatly a. 10 'appose
t they have already endowed gosh a decided
•egg ne the warlike -glary create .1 duet
•
e
ORDINATION.
On. the 300 u!r •nn, the Rev, Joey Lome was
0-d0rned o, the office of the Holy 'fernery, .pd
the 1'a•enral chug• of the I7oited Presbyterian
Ceneregation at Stenley, by the United Prnhy-
tery of London. The Rev. Chide. Fletcher
Preached from Nelms !evil 1, and offered no the
Ordenaiion Prayer, and the Re•. Alesender
aleKenxie delivered apornpriate addressee to the
ening minister, andthepeople of his charge.
\Ir. Lore has entered on • very large and
important field of labour, with every prospect of
auccea.
NEEDED REFORMS.
h The evils enumerated on all hands, em-
braee the following:
tet. The Rectories -the endowment of
which has been the prolific sourer. of (acon-
tent in the province, and ever will be, till
t"tally ahilahed.
2ml. -The Clergy Reserves -the alloca-
tion 01 which, fora few pampered chore hes,
to to their ministers "a snare," while to the
ramie. at large they are a curse, and worse,
they are an "1 Ing curse'"
3r1. Erfrarogaat Gorernme•t.--00 this
p„mt there exu.tg perfnct h•rriih1y of opt.
ntnn, so far as the pmhhc organ• may be
taken as • guide, and N becomes Mr. Bald-
win to see that he is not behind the age,
when thin subject comes before parliament,
next session.
dee The Relrefine o/ Useless
We want ' law reform," not 50 npn in
the last aesarnn, bycreating unnbeosvr
R 1
enJ intrudecing unnec.aory and ex-
twn,,, forms, but by simphflcatton of
fnr,n , and by redneiine of inns.
R•,des cheep, then are a number of other
Important matters which reg•nre attention •'•!1'!��e_
-•urh as the Enlargement of the Reprseen. We are sorry to Pee the tourser still per
totem, F.ctensloe of Electoral Fnnehu.'t� .nerd by some of our contemporaries, on the
Amendment of Aas.e.ment Iowa, $nb•ti I atrer avow of Annexstaon. We ran Rita en-
twine of a Direct aM therefore ■ light thine by denying a single advantage poss-
Tax, for an indirect and conaegiently an Peed over us, by the people of the United
•apenrev.ly collected one. The mod. of Stales. Our true corms. ie, freely and fut.
nume revenues by duties i' little better 1y to point out, sad remoye,everydisadva,-
than a pr,.eext for b.'rjhting the ennntry tag* enter whech, as eolomete, we still
with a horde of efMce-heldlers. it opens labor. This will do no more to disarm th.
rep, Itk.w,.., a mine to the rapacity of un- tries strive' to teamster this emmntry, than
unnr,plpd pfierara, w!In not only plooder, all the sedum. and cawii•try of the Prose
but •m ped wMle pinndortng• cawpo..tbly offset. Then is no loreTo thee. we might .astly .dd a niiaW , which ea. persuade thee** that 10 per
ofothe a but snflleient has been rem for met duty aeumt theme, t. the ...rest tsar -
oar Wrpnos. • het, t• not a disedva,tags. Thom are so
urrethtng to sell, the produce of their had res 1e ..rad then' in putting 1pmcelf fur-
oemothind puttingto, . the of the old "their ward, leading on the simpletons by his sell -
deniers" in mind; that a great chance has '•-the-wisp phaetons of retrenchment, and
taken place in the few care since the time by this cor.tr.rance putting the forms int.
they hunted dyer and other game over the the secure posseaeirin of power. i1-eong
C' secured their object, the sect -useful Troy
scene of the present traffic; and we may leaders maid go so far as to throw their
nJJ that these frame old settlers Ronk for- man Friday, G 'wan, a hone in the shag,• of
ment in tothcewing ,corm'spontnngAimp eve-.ete i a canal commierinnersh'p, or something of
to the contrary notwithstanding. stent that kind. 'retrenchment"Rite that they would then carry
Advertiser. out the retrenchment" for which he is
crying so lustily, let no man 'be pie;Teton
enough to rxpect,pr believe any such ab •
-
surdity. These Tory proteseiuno about re-
trechritent are the rankest humbug; and
the bust proof of this is, that the leaders of
that party are foxes enough to keep clear
of committing themselves on any ref geese
got -tip tnoi i.. Wllh regard to ■nn,'xa-
i on, the Turves would play a nimrlar game,
if they hail a chance. The leaders of the
Party 0:11 krep clear of that movement. -
They w'::1 nay nothing about it, during the
next two sections of the present Parliament,
for the question. well never come up in such
a shape as to require them to commit thcm-
eelsc, eine way or the other.
Ilavtng dodged the question for two
year', they will be all things to all men at
the next general election. in addition to,
their own party, who will sustain them as
a matter of coelr,e, the financial eco:eomint,
and the annexartomat may possibly be weak
enough to hope something from the adient
of the tortes to power. Some of the small
try of the Parl .mentananp amongst the
tortes may go so far as to advocate annexa-
tion, to suit themselves to the tone of cer-
tain conPtemenciea, as they now chime in
with the popular sentiment by shouting for
"• financial reform," or they may even be
sincere in .*brae professions; but how will
they act in Parliament 1 Follow their
leaden, of course. Annexation will not
clime at once, and it re ji.t potable that
In 1`159, we may wrin,se the phenomenon
of a tory ministry testatned by the broken
fr•gments of the old cat metal tone. -if
lheee curiosities have not been placed in •
suitable museum by that Lme-aad a few
half-grown annexaiinn,.tr, who true to
their instincts and their political antece-
dents, will be practical term., for the
nonce, while the great question se • bey -
once. This a ra'be r a (orttiou• road to
power, to he sen; still we see '.meth Ing
very like of blazed tree., through the vista
of the future, in the direction we have todi-
cated. We hey. an donht that Jobe Hill -
yard Cameron sed Henry Sherwood could
ewe It too, by the aid of a gond eyeglass.0•.
Well, we intend to keep a strict look -cut,
and tell a few tree., and roll a few logs
across the thet,flit be necessary,
!)INNER TO MR. PRiCE.
The eosetitu..0 of the Hoe. James Mary
my Prier., will mn•errsin him at dine, en
Thormtsy, eke tato Direember, at Powell's
Hotel, Yonge Street. We nederetaed that
the member,, oh' Gnvernnee.t have boss in-
vited and that a "etsmadawN•" demagolws-
tisnieae d.-Iwair.
A generuos .upport is demanded, and
very properly Po, by the present Govern-
ment, from the Returner, of Canada. That
support has been given, and will late! be
given : but generomty, like all other vir-
tecs, has its proper bound.. There is an
old proverb which raps, " we flight to be
ilii before we are generous," The Re-
formers of Canaela are perfectly wilhne to
extend s generous clpaort to the Mints'ry,
but they Inok, in retirn, for the prompt
accomplishment nfevery prnmiic made them
when their support wav solicited. This i•
not a time et trifle with the expectation!,
nxrited by many of the leaders of the Re-
form party, now directing the government
of the 'country- When Annexation agi•
tate, the country from Gaspe to Sandwich
-when wlsnle constituencies and their
members declare in- fovor of dismember-
ment, tnfliog difficulties in carrying 0,1
great measurer, long advocated by the Re
form party, meet not he extegerated bolt,
mninta:na. The dignified silence maintain-
ed by the Reform party in Canada, on the
vexed (peahen of At' mention, mutt not be
InterprotieJ into indifference. 'Mit silence
will continue till we see a well defined pi•
!icy submitted, calculated In make Canaria
what she ought to be. But should the Re
forefeet be rleappointed res the, further si-
lence would be a enilty aequten.ence to the
rnntineed degradation of the cnnntry. The
limen are ominous. England looks on with
a calm dignity, and from the new■ hy the
America evidently lenses Cenada to bo the
arbiter of her own fate. Never Wail • wi.
Ser policy adopted lq reference to this coun-
try. Orr action w,1 be that of con!. cal-
culating deliberation ; not that of excite-
ment nr anger. Our. will not be the
course of the petulant neIf•w,lled boy, whose
gettnn. being interfered with, •tubhnrnl•
determines to here his own war, right or
wrung. -.yl. Catekariee, Joareal.