Edited Text
ee
HISSELLANEOUS,
een ne no =
Parsox Eaowntow.âThis Rev. gentleman) Bini !! Yes, â the Proprietorsâ Relief Hill,â the | pa
was fermerly located in the State of Tennessee
STARVED
The other night two wowen died of want and pri
vation in the atreets of London. One was dircovee
el by a iceman in the morning, sitting
crogched np position on a stair.â
was quite dead.
whe deep night fell o'er Lonton,
With its riot amd bustle aid diaâ
It fell o'er the streets of the Mty,
It fell o'er the haents of sin
Were there none with hearts of pity
Teo take the poor Wayfarer in!
She walked through Christian Loudon
Wretched, barefooted, forlorn!
With piouding hanger pinched features,
With aspect weury and worn
And the wid March blast, as 4 hurried past,
t
Fluwered ber ramnent tora
No home in all wide Londen! -
She shrunk from the ch Ne wir,
Bhe drew her tuitered antle
* Round her shoniders eold and bare,
And from the beat of the rain and sleet
erouched on the lonely stair.
And throagh the streets of London,
The heediess crowd went on;
No eve saw the friendloss wouan,
r~ ' = a | judging by ibe amount of christian charity âwhich
renova â
doctor's in the neiguborhood, it was found that she}
true to the Lnien cause. He was imprisoned for.
a time by the secessionists, but ulttnaiely gat {ror
~ and came North, where he is creating quite a aen-
~bention, Feav, if any, will doubt hig loyalty; but
he professes for the clergymen of the South, asme
jare of opinion that he has no more piely than is
necessary for the diseburge of the duties of a
| Doctor of Divinity.
i Before a convention of Methodist ministers at
| Cincinnati, this man, speaking of men ahd affairs
in the South, said :â ?
| «"Dhis thing called segession originated in falsg-
rried his proposal for a shooting match, earried
dietuyp of Sir Saaned Canard and the Proprietory | a solemn challenge | frou him to ~~ ogg
Govermment whom you elected! instead of the) The strange part of the aflair is, not tha
that the Chancellor of England should have been
the great political kumbag! How torcibly it re- or
âtaken wiih chat.â
minds one of the fable of the âmountain in labour,â
from which emanated the â ridieulous mouse.â o
The perturbation of the Proprietory Tory Go-| Commons on Tuesday evening. Mr. Berkeley 5
vernmenf during the last two years ends in the) ayyyal notice of motion about the Ballot having
production of that ugly unfledged embrye bantling | stood bigh on the list, the benches on both sides
called âthe Award,â (new transniuted inte the | were nearly empty et seven o'clock â Lord VPal-
â Proprietersâ Relief Billâ) under the careful mid-| merston, anwng the rest, having gone: either to
wifery and nursing of the gallant Cols. Gray and | qoze or to dine, While the member for Bristol was
Haviland, which is scarcely permitted to draw expected to repeat his arguments in favor of his
breath ere it is strangled ky Sir Samuel Cunard, ! pet propositiv:. Bat Mr. Berkeley had no notion
and so passeil) away the hypocritical mask of the | of taiking to empty beaches when he saw an op-
! hood, theft ang perjury. Floyd did the stgaling,
{the masses of the people did the lying, and four |
teen United States Senators frém the Cotten
| States the perjury. While in the Senate in the)
| day time they made a show of keeping theiroaths,
but at night they held their seeret caucuses, plan-|
} ning secession, and advising their leaders to seize
the prominent forts of the South asd aris of tin-
| portance wherever they could fiud them.
âLT have no doubt there are better men in hell
or in the Penitentiaries ef this or any uther State, |
{than theâ prominent leaders th this secession
movement. And I am sorry to say that the worst)
| class of men now in the Southern Contederacy are |
the Episcopalian, Methodist, Baptist aud Presby-|
iterian preachers. High funetionaries iv the
i
present Ministry, who are thus so ignominiously ,portumty of afealing a mgreh upon lis ââ
exposed to the indignant scorn of an injured and) and observing a majority of his friends im the
hitherto too confiding Tenantry. Like the black-| }{ouse, he quietly answered the Speaker's call by
leg gang who are sure to kang themselves wien |
allowed plenty of rope (opportunity for mischiet), | time. E .
so the worthless crew te whom you iutrusted tac) conded, poor Mr. Brand ran aghast into the lobby
state affairs of our lithe: Colonyâwho always had) to peat up bis frees, but he was too late: the
the eill to injure you â no sooner had the means | Speaker pyt the question, ayes and noes, and just
of doing so than they coynaenced to rivet: your
propHetory chains; and having plenty of rope, â i
they ceased not until they hung themselves so high just in time to. be too late to speak against ime.
that they now Aang like so many political scure-
crows to warn the tenants for ali time to come to
beware of such treacherous demagogies, and to
point the finger of scorn at them during the next
geieral election, and tell them that they have
simply moving that
ruffled by such incidents, Was unable to cancea!
his chagrin on this occasion, which of course ouly
served to jnerease the laugh against him.
Report of the Land Commissioners; aud so ends | shoykl have sup wad a joke to be earnest, but)
There was av ainusing scene in the Honse of) hard, in the House of Assembly, to make if appear
his Hill be now read a second | the power of taxing the private property of any | tions will read it with the same pleasure that we
The motion having been as concisely âa Catholic to any extent the Bishop pleased. The
as he declared that the ayes had if, Lord Palimer-
stot rushed mto the House ainid roars of laughter,
7 | a â ah . na
The noble lord, who seldom allows himself to be | remain intact as ever under the Bill.
from any lands and premisesâ (made over to him
in his ecclesiastical charaeter) â shall be applied
for the useg and purposes of the Church or Churches
| within the perish where such lands are situate, and
Mr. J. G. Pope laboured very
Flonreng and
Church a8 the enemy of progress and civilization,
Ieport of the Duke de tad
and the patroness of epiritual and temporal en-| 9, 5 would set
thralment. We advise the people of â Boyne roa - ko 4 Wallen â he ok nde.
mtiquity, ain t ;
Lodge, No. 614,â to read M. Dupanleppis Letter Augean Cochin upon" Moder oe work a) yt
before going ta one of these monthly meetings at | are men os Gritere cf other authority fh, Here
we a vain te whe, a â
âwhich publie officials anuse themrelves by indatge) ed ey Christ chd hie Chek tite, th
ing im rant, falsehood, seurrility andy blasphemy the eferts of science fn desperution, this Chal
, a â , dogma of the unity of ot as .
against the religion professed by nearly iow eo muse perieh thee. dignity. the Irateri tt ea
been or shall be given up to trustees or Church | our population, who | y and inaffensively pay of maukind, Ir.â let ts pas from the iberty
their share of the p xes, to support the of-
Wish 16
_, | shown by experience, that siny
the principles and practices of the Charch with | the initiation and the training of Hoenig nat ber
oo
â
not elsewhere.â
$F
that the Bishop's Incorporation Bul would have
the effect of alienating any lands that may have
wardens in any particular parish for the support
of the priest of that parish. His brother the Co-
lonial Seeretary has since attempted to spread the
same false impression; and, indeed, he went fur-
I do not wish to answer anythi . .
z | jected in favor of this sad A ig yay MAY be of,
> .inls who are thus permitted to abuse them. The | discuss doctrinal subtleties: ry
ficial 1 " " ut 1 ask thet
Letter of the French Bishop eloquently expounds | truths of experience be not rejected, &
a - sabe
, : : afta. eae -e are con- | }t endurcs the more it oppresses ; Bat
ther, by trying to prepagate the abominable delu- | regard to universal Âą nner aa i : tends the more it degrades; and a ml wea
; itis : â. mally, Pe , ~iudiced reader . ina-| itself by its sole actic Y TAVely
ee at. under the he Bishop would have | fident that unprejudiced readers of all denom itself by e action. You refine
sion, that, under the Bill, t â . free, becanre, you say, they are 50 Set slavey
liberty ; and J, 1 tell you that this lerapacis.
enjoyed in its perusal. kept alive by servitude, if not erented Wonâ
| : i . that it canses the slave to te YM, ang
, concluding part of the rst section and the whole also the teaching of expen the Me thie
of the sixth section furnish the very strongest re-/ paSTORAL ADDRESS OF M. DU-| the day toe poms A phere af ori per of
4 > ~ â . > my > > tend | CONSE nce equa y Pies * sore
futation of the allegations advanced by Mr. James PANLOL P, oe ye seaman TO ll â, the ignolte fn ame laid
aud Mr. W. H. Pope. Ludiv'dualand trust rights HIS CLERGY ON SL: ; re a oe oot
ee : ee . in 1639, by Benedict XTV, j :
he Bis- ELOQUENT APPEAL TO ALL CORISTIANS. XVL. in 1839. âThe pe wd pĂ©ectn aed lent
dhsmmeonen f family tie, condemned ym
he byte b dr bartall thle We dual: 1 From the New York Evening Post J co... the decrease i <
rights of any individual or parish on e Se LD ihe teeeunditeall by our latest foreign papers | of the slave but of the master, fur it goes the
and, in fact, his Lordship can do nothing in his the circular of Lishop Dapanloup of Orleaus,France,
hop can no more interfere with the established
Nor heard ber pitect's monn,
. ily heart that Wie haman ! â shat tcl a
er oe t e the homeless one ! ing. Meu who have met in our general conier-|
j ences with sowe ef these aged brethren whom 1}
Death stalked through the streejs of London now see around me, preach as chaplains en Sab-|
fut jess unknown was he;
He aw the woman lving
in her lonely misery ;
He took ber hand, and in accents land,
uid ** Come away wih ine.â
j
A Presbyterian minister in Knoxville invited all,
denominations to hold a Union prayer meeting hisk
pray to the Lord to suk Burusideâs fleet and raise |
Lineolnâs blockade.
- Pom td clerics } Y besieged 2 |
Tay dawned on stately Loudon: posed of many old clerical rips, who besieg 1:
bath, but swear and get drunk throng) the week. |
Episcopalian Church are now drinking aud syvear- | taught you by their political delinquency to trust
your interests into the hands of better men in
future. Pheiractions have proved to youthat they
are not * the right men in the right place ââthat
they have done nothing for your interestsâthat
although they purchased the Selkirk Estate and
Lot 54, they only partially aeied on âthe Land
Purehase Actâ passed by Mr. Coles and iis friends, |
And at it they went, Âąom-!| aid that so corrupt and so selfish have they been
that they refused to show the correspondence
sent arrangemeris, Her Majesty, with the Royal
rive on the following morning.
Court Movements. â According to the pre-
of forbidding the master to teach the
and to write in favor of liberty. clave ÂŁ0 dead
family aud suite, will leave Balmoral on the 3rd
proximo, for Windsor Castle, where she will ar-
The Court will
remain at Windsor until the 16th of June, when
her Majesty will take her depagture for Osborne.
Preparations are geing on for the warriege of the
| Prineess Alice, which will take place at Osborne
about the latter end of dune, or early in July.
The Princess Alice and her illustrious concert
i i ri su yi hich be discusses the great political question
-orporate capacity without the written consent of |in which he discusses the yrew
corporate capacity of this country audage. It will be ae pat he
most candidly approves âof President Liucon's
Kimancipation policy : Ru od be the âe piped thet Dam, de rd
GexteeMEN axp Fritow-Lagoners :âYou sel Sdtow etait in the-tinnea SIX millions of yy
dom aliow the fur distant echoes of foreign rlities ae aah po Meda ner pistes, in Tract, 4
to reach you. Your presbytery, which I so love to! viganons ian young girls, chit
visit, is the resting-place of peace, of contemplation, Is it not yer ti ay Phe *
The a « » â
the Vicar General, or two other clergymen, as afer Of God, sd children âof tomy Tae ATM
set forth in the third section of the Act. âya
The Colonial Secretary may say that the Bill
now printed is not exactly the same as the one in-
troduced by the Hon. Francis Kelly, as Chairinan Heaven!
The san shone warm gad bright
i throne of grace, heaving and setting like an eld whieh took plice in the purchase of these proper-
} Tennessee ram at a gate post, thai God would
send lightning and siorm and raise the blockade.
| And the Lord did give them a raiseâat Roanoke
Leland, and with the kind of lightning and storm
Ou the womazi's crouching figure,
In its melayeholy plightâ
On her garnieuts torn and meagre,
On her features still and white
Starved in the streets of London!
fet mayhay a mother hud sunile i q â iw
ott sities dave of happiness {make use of the following words on the Lordâs
In the laaghing eves of her childâ | day; which he sgad he would give to show the de-
Those eves that how stare with siouy stare, | gradation at the pulpit,
* And gleam With mdianee wild. marks he said that * Jesus Chijst pasa Soytgern
man, and all his apostles were Southern meu save
Starved in the streets of Lendon! | Judas, who was fron the North, and that he would
*Mid its wealth, and the ceaseless swell
(* âo sige ree raising high | from one printed and bound north of Musun and
n e heavet |
O ve who dwel : , :
yo sneyeer Dixon's line. I regard the churches in the
Iu the mist of riches and laxury, . â mre
Sayâis it well !âIs it well! South ruined, and financially they are in a bad
| More recently m Washiggten st a public recep-
| tion given him, he said :â
. <~2- CO
OPPOSED TO MATRIMONY.
P yey Rey eet yes aN i} men God Almighty ever let live. MeClelian was
* Wal, no, T rather guess net, seeinâ as how my gallant, able, and would come out all right. Fre-
mother has had foar husbands, anâ stands a pretty |) nt was the sort of a man in the time of war.
smart ehanee for having auether.â | He would make a spoou or spoil a hern, Had
â Four husbands? Is it possible?â lold Hickory beew alive when Floyd began to steal,
*O. ves. Yousee, my motherâs christened name } he would have said, Floyd, by the God that â
was Mehitable Sheets, anâ dad's name was Jacob | Moses, this thing .uust stop, aud ahs ay big tama
Press; anâ when they got watried the printers said Buchanaa was that miserable mockery of Fy mae
it waa puttinâ the sheets to press. Whey L was) at Wheatland. His house oxi ag i.
born they said | was the Grst editions, Anâ you aearehed tor arms, be reppletepne tot weg Gee
sgâ, mother used te be the tarnalist critter to go, being a Doctor of Divinity. A t he ; o âti
te eveninâ meetinsâ. She used to go out pretty | tar under his jacket, i reacher as he was he woulk
late every night, anâ dad was afraid I'd get iv the | see the infernal rebellion aud all its abettors inte
same habit, so he nsed to put me to bed at early we} uvernal Pe ac before he would join thea,
dielicht, cover me up with a pillar, ailâ put me | Of Secession he said: | : .
ae p with a beet âack. Wal dad had ok up! * Thies w as the epirit of Scere, not â, in
every aight anâ let mother in; if he didnât get down | Peunessee, but allover the: outh a wart " opt
anâ opes the deer pretty darned quick whea she of heli, and yet we had meu at the : orth Yo 99 ore:
cum, ueâd ketch partic'lar thander; so dad used | tulze with if. (Applause aud teeth eae
to sleep with his head ont of the winder, soâs to} lt he ow ed tweive ot the nest reve ting w â-
wake up quick, anâ one night Ke get his head a aad depraved scoundrels the world ever saw to lis
little toe far eut, anâ he slipped out altogether, anâ satanie majesty, he would make a tender of twelve
down dad cuin, caflumux right dow; oy the paver northerners 85 ww pathiz nig with SECESSION, (Great
ment, anâ smashed him in ten thousand pieces!â | applause and langhter ) They might deem hun se-
* What! was he killed by the fall?â | vere and bitter in his denunciation | of traiters ;
âWal, no, not exactly by the fall. I rayther) but they must consider that they i the South took
kinder sorter guess as how it was the sudden fetch | it as a persona! matter. These Northern treiters
up ow the pasewent thet billed bim. Kut maim | @ught not to be tolerated on Broadway. âThey
she cum iu, auâ Gaand bing layinâ thar, and ehe | ought to be ridden ov a rail out of the North, and;
had hime swept up together, anâ put in a coffin, anâ | mote to show tieir haud. (Applause, and cries
had a hele dug i the buryiaâ grounâ, anâ had dad | of suame- ) sia i, :
put ia anâ buried up, auâ had a white oak pink â ~ ile closed with the belief that MeClellan and
put up to his head, anâ had it white-washed all the Union Generals would drive secession inte the
» ,
over for a tomb-stone.â :
âSo your mother was left a poor lone widow?
â Wal, yea, but as she did'nt mind that much,) An Arkansas correspondent, who probably
it wasânt long before she married Sain Hite: you | Wanted to â wake upâ Mr. Brownlow, wrote to
see she married Hide because he was just dad's! the latter, stating that he had learved with pleasure
the sea.â
a, aad she wanted him to wear out dadâs clothes. upon what âhe cousidered reliable authority,â |
Wal, the way old Hide used to hide me was a) that Mr. Brownlow was about to juin the Deuw-
caution to my hide, Hide had a little the toughest | erats, and asked for the probable date ot that ia-
hide of any hide except a bull's bide, and the way | teresting vecurreuce.
Hide used to hide away liquor in hw hide was a least data tor the date, as follows:
eantion to a bullâs hide. Wal, one cold day old
Hide got his hide so full of whiskey that he pitched
bead first inte a snow bank, and there stuck anâ!
friz to death. So mam had him: pulled out, an '3Hh ult., and hasten to let you know the precise
diad him laid out, and then she had another buryiuâ | time when L expect to come out and formally an-
grownâ anâ bad hin buried, anâ the» she had an- | nownce that I have jeind the Democratic party.
other white oak piank put up at his lead anâ) When the sua shines at midnight, ant the moon
white-washed all over, anââ" at midday â when man forgets to be selfish, o
â So your mother was again a widow.â | Deinvcrats lose their inclinations to stealâwhen
âO, yes, but I guess she didu't lay awake long | nature steps her onward march to rest, or ail ihe
to think about it, for in about three weeks she | water courses in America flow up streamâwhen
married Johu Sitongâanâ he was the strongest! flowers lose their odor, and trees shed no leavesâ
headed cuss you ever did see. He went a fishinâ | when birds talk, and beasts ef burden Tanghâ
the other day anâ got drowned, auâ he was 30° when dammed spirits swap hell fur heaven, with |
tarnal strong headed, I'l] be darned to darnation | ihe angels of ligt, and pay them the boot in mean |
if be didnât float right agin the current, auâ they whiskeyâwhen impossibilities are ia fashion, aud |
found hit about three miles > ie FER 89 | ho proposition is tuo absurd to be believed, you
jt took three yoke oâ eattle to haul him eut ral, ggay ereJit the report that I have joiued the deav-
mam had bine huricd aleng side oâ tother two, anâ ti 8 â rT d ;
had a white oak plank put up et his head, a.â I join the Democrats! Never, so long aa there
white-washed all over niece, se thereâs three on | are sects in churches, weeds in gardens, fleas in|
KNOXVILLE, Ancust 6, 1861.
| which they did not expect in answer to prayer.)
| Lalso heard a Presbyterian minister in Koxville |
lu the course ef bis re-)
| sooner read a text from a bible bound in be}! than |
: . |
â The leaders in the rebellion are the very worst |
Gulf of Mexico, as the devils drove the swine into |
Mr. B. gave the date, or}
Mr. Jordax Clarke :â1 have your letter of the |
contemplate visiting Switzerland mn the autumn.
âLhe contemplated trip of Queen Victoria to Co-
burg has been made the occasion for addressing
ito her Majesty an invitation on the part of the Aus-
tieularly of Lot 54, the tile to whieh was known | tian Court. It âa to be buped that her Majesty,
to be bad during the fast half ceatary. They have | @fer a stay at Reinhartebrunn, nodosa Il oa
taxed you heavily â more thin doubled the debt} meet the Crowa Princess of | visit, wil pay s
of the Colony, and nearly destroyed its conunerce vist to the Lmaperer at the Palace of Greinburg,
by bad management â almost paralyzed the guod | in Upper Austria.
of the Free Education Act by wortiiess appoint |
ments, especially the School Visitor, who pockets |
|
ties, Which leaves them under the inevitable sus-
picion of hiding thereby seme palpable or rasealiy
â shuffling, in order to cover their culpability aud to
screen the bad Utles of the properties, more par-
FRANCE.
tur doing nothing, unless going about eecasionally | pyres of cotton cloth to dispense with the use of
on the work of deception, canvassing for the Pro-) A yyevican cottou. It appears thata piece of clot i) Lougwort lâs ebjectionable clauses, was printed in |
prietory faction who a pointed him, instead of) has heen manufactured af a common plant whick |
| visiting the schools as âequired by law; and 80 | vrows wild in the fields, and which will shortl
| disgraceful has his neg} gence been, that the Ge! he exhibited to a commission composed of manu-
vernment were both w'caid and ashamed to have jfactucers, The discovery bas been communicated
iis report exposed by Lir. Coles and others in the
Assembly, that it was kept back uutil the very |
last day ofthe sessiol. \
to make known the base hypoerisy, the hollow | ried the day.
pretensions, the v.le deception, the cunning rascal | js appoiuted to the command of the French army
ity, the predetermined traud to be practised on) at Rome. i
to the Emperor, who takes great interest hi if.
The Paris correspondent of the Morning Herald
. : The Journal de Rouen announces a most im-| yolyed in it was considered sound. The draft Bill
to hundred pounds a yewr of the people's money portant discovery which will enable the manutae-|
it any proof were wanting | writes as follows:âThe clerical party have car-
General the Count de Montebetlo
. ; . ct The General is well known for his
the Tenantry by the present party in power, it is! Ultramontane tendencies, and it is believed that,
. . oe f praver and of charit„. During Leat you do not) © ithe, sal Cente
of the Special Committee appointed to bring in the Swell in oe parsonage! all day you dwell in your -_ vonage â = âs to pone
Bill. We admit all that. But the only difference haga hoping yonem so cong a oo eee which you would not he should do to van. ~
st ve tei, @nd ou yo c 4 > eek 3 : |
between Mr. KellyâsBill and the one that passed, God to preach und'to pray, invoking for mea the which you would year iii
is, that the former contained two clauses which
âformed part of the Bill introduced by the Ton
John Lougworth ia the previous year, which was
i supported by the Hon. J. C. Pope, and which,
notice and pardon of God, beseeching men to think
with you upon thesdeath of Jesus Christ, and to
unite with the sufferimps of His cross the sufferings
of their lives. Ido not come to withdraw your at-
tention in the midst of your pious engagementsâl
come to beg for a prayer. DPruyer! that is our po-
âafter being severely criticised by the Dake of
Newcastle, and described as âcarelessly drawn
up,â was disallowed, although the principle in-
introduced by Mr, Kelly, and containing Mr.
lities ; that is our great interest inthe events of this
\workd. To speak of God to nen, and to speak of
lmen to God, that is our mission. And surely it is
no small matteroeven inthe order of earthly inte-
rests, so ardently contended about amongst men ;
for m it is God, who holds in His hands the hearts
of peoples and rulers, aud bends them as He will ;
the âIslanderâ of the 23d May, accompanied by
such remarks as might lead many persons to sup-
pose that it was the Bill actually passed; but the
itis He who now sorrowfully abandons them to
their course, and now stops them on the verge of
ithe precipice and draws them buck, willing or un-
willlag, through diis mercy: whether a hylitning
flash of whut is happening comes to show at a
glance the depths of sin into which they are preei-
real fact is, that after some debate, the whole
jlouse agreed that it would be better to pass the
it would meet all the requiremeuis of the case;
and the new draft was accordingly introdueed by
to be found in âthe Proprietorsâ Relief Bill,â inthe | jy addition to his military command, he will re) Mr. Kellyâwas passed without a dissenting veice,
preamble to which it says: âIn making which last! present, as Ambassador, the French conrt at the
direction or provision (relative to the arbitration) Vatican. âThis appoiatment fully confirms a tele-
| the said Commissioners exceeded the authority | gram which you wiil have already received, to the
intended to be given them by the Assembly and | effect that the charge affaires, M. de Bellune
the said Proprietors.â Now, in the name of come | has assured Cardinal Antonelli that the Pope need
mou sense, how could Sir Samuel Cunard and} yot entertain avy apprehensions as to the policy
other Proprictors know what authority the ma-| of the Lmperor, which would continue in cou-
jovity of the Assembly intended to give the so-called | formity with the speeci of M. Billault, in the
Royal Commissioners, weless it had been com-| Senate. M. Billaut, you will remember, stated
municated ta them hy their tools in the Assembly, or | in the most explicit manner, that the French
previously understood, known and agreed on before troops would never leave Rome uatil a reconcili-
the Commission was sought or asked for? Uere | ation was brought about between the Pope and
then is the gigantic traud, the huge swindle, the | the King of Italy. The news is not sufficiently
notorious, Well contrived conspiracy against the) known yet te be able to ascertain how the public
sudering tenautry, ummasksd, laid epen to view.! will receive it, but the Ultramontanes will do
The said preamble stated previously : â And } their best to exaggerate and the Liberals to di- |
we believe, from either Protestants or Catholics,
and will be found, as published below, to be unob-
jectionable in all its provisions, Mr. Seeretary
Pope must be very hard pushed for political capital
when he makes it the ground of an attack against
certain members of the Liberal party, who, if the
Bill were a bad oae, were certainly not mere liable
to censure for passing it than the Tories were.
An Act to Iacorporate the Roman Catholic Bishop
corporate the Right Reverned Peter Macintyre,
New Brunswick Act, without any alteration, as |
tn Charlottetown, if
Whereas it is deemed just and expedient to-in-
pituting. themselves, er that a holier light endows
them withfarae wisdom. Be it a» it may, gentle-
jmen, the most unthinking know well that aflairsdo
not moré on here below without the powerful con-
currence of cirenmstances, which they call the hits
of chavee and we cull the direction und the act of
God. They too often look upon them as blind men.
More eulightened, we do not cease to raise to
heaven a voice, trustful and pexceful, for the happ?-
nevs, the progress and the fature of the whole
world. We are praying for Syviu and for Poland,
for Bogland and for Russia, for China and for Afri-
ca ; for the victories of France, and for the victorves
of the Faith; for those who suffer, who weep,who
hope ; for those who groan and who pray with us,
and also as well for those who do not pray, who do
not groan, who close their eyes, who forget !
' This day, Sabbath of the Passion, at this hour,
when the standard of the cross ia hoisted over al
our temples, at the sight of this holy emblem of de-
liverance and of safety, I say to myself, my God
| died upon the cress for el] mankind, and yet there
fare men who still are erucified. He died to deliver
jall from all bondage, and there are menâthe noise
which is now waking about this great question
painfully recalls to meâihere are millions of men
who are still inslavery! Good Friday is approach-
whereas the said Cominissioners, by their report, | minish its importance. After General de Goyon, | Roman Catholic Bishop in Charlottetown, iw Priuge jing. That day, the Catholie Church, standing at
| did declare that the said Township Lands were | the Pepe iumself could not have selected a more | Edward fsland, for tie parpose of enabling himapd | the foot of the eross, with eyes fixed on those ex-
| his successors to hold and acquire Real Extate in ltended arms which embrace the world, will com-
not liable to forfeiture in consequence of the non-| devoted partisan of his temporal power than M. de
performance of any of the condifions in the original | Montebello. Neither need it be pointed out that
grauts; and alse that vo arrears of the Quit Kents | this appointment, the most unpalatable that could
) are now due or recoverable from the Propricters; | be devised, as far as the Italian Court is concerned, |
| aud also that the Proprietors sheuld be quieted in| forms a singular result of tho mission of Prince
certain parts of the said land called Fistery Re- Napoleon.
serves.â Tlere we have a full, perfect and con- |
clusive kuewledge of what auiheority or powers |
were intended to be given by the Assembly and |
the Proprietors to the Commissioners, without the
east doubt whatever: just power and authority
enough to report anything in favour of the Pro-
prietory land claimants, and nothing at all in
| tuvour of the laborious and long suffering Tenaniry.
| Tshall conclude my present epistle by 2eking youâ
the down-trodden, the enslaved, the deceived, tiie
humbugged Tenantry of my adepted countryâwill
you vole at the next election for the present Pro- |
prietory faction, who have so abused the trust you |
}reposed in them at the last election! No, is|
answered for you, by
ABBERDUMBEER WILHTOCK.
ROME.
The recal of General Goyon from Rome is an
accomplished fact; and so Jar M. Lavalette has
succeeded in the object which hie lad in view in
leaving his Embassy and returning to France.
sut the Marquis wusiipped himself while eudea-
vouring to overthrow the General.
| back to Rome.
This has been brongut about by
Geyon should be recalled because of bis supposed
eyaipathy with the Supreme Poutitfin hi
the retmaoval of the Preach Ambassa:
himself notorious for his hostility to the LLoly See,
would alse becoine an absolute necessity. Whether
lor not the Fanperor encouraged the Aubassador
in his petulance at Rome, at all events he had no
alternative but to putan ead to tis diplomatic
career in the Eternal City when Goyouâs reeall
s traubles,
«Che: Examiner,
i
Senator for his services, and ibe ex-Ambassador!
isâthe Marquis de Lavalette. It is not,it seems, |
â _ a RNR Nn ee
<= LSS
Charlottetown, 16th June. 1562.
Rome, and the Count Montebdelio is at once Am-|
hassador of France to the Holy See aad Com |
NEWS BY THE ENGLISH MATI,, | mana.>i Chief of the French army in Rome
i In the meanune the Emperor appears mere s
a)
Tur R. M. Steamship â Africaâ arrived at Ha- hago than Âą as ye sug Hi geet he â â
the «@ rietba tat he peas Wei OY Dee Ulhurch,
f. } â poe > 2.) Lee COUVIC TG CEE Li 4 4 ye }
fax on the 11th inst. Latest Mnglish dates are | og that there iz no intention te deviate fro:n fhe!
to the 3ist ult. All the news of importance will | stetus quo.
be found in the following extracts from our latest | PORTUGAL.
papers. The King of Portugal is about to marry the
â
Ile goes not |
ihe firmness of the Pope, who caused If to be in- |
| mated to fhe Eanperor Napoleon that if General |
Whe made |
was determined upon; and now the General is a}
| this Island for religions parposes.
jnend to our Lord, in sublime prayer, Christians,
i
1. Be it therefore enacted by the Lieutenant Go-
vernor, Council and Assembiv
| the passing of this Act, the |
|
That from aml after lthese noble words: âLet us pray God the Father,
wht Reverned Peter | omuipotent, that He may cleanse the world from | softens even the lot of the poor slave, by softening
l heretics, Jews, Pagans: and we will utter with her
j dition whicn bas no
do ye sor them !' â1s it not at length ;
should lend our ears to that great »
Master, = Love ye one Farm al âall
ye be known as my disciples, if
other?â After eighteen centuries te tem
ec to slaves â tir a
we sh 60 ngain; apparently wij 3
the right to ooletee luasters of ey yt
move them to do justice. at lo
Since Jesus Christ, St. Paul and Apostles !:
down the principles of universal ym a laid
most illustrions preachers of the fil, the mate?
tinguished Bishops, the most : the
Poutifis have spoken in their order, J
thoroughly, you, who daily calumuiate the
that, it the Church rebukes the outburete of tices,
tious minds, human liberty is dear te it ; for liberty
in the scheme of God, who has not Treated man gs
imbecile slave, liberty is the source .
issucs every sovial Virtne ; the source of
greatness ; of all civilization; of ail ;
the Church, true mother of Loman rN the
Charch which has built np modern soc ;
tions, deplores all that injures er impedes htteas
of humanity, daughter of ted, and blesses all the
aids, improves and elevates ber, the spiri
of the Gospel ; and the spirit of the mc ee
the fascination of mterest which alone expining tine
coutinnation in Christian lands ef the Plague whic
I deplore, cannot prevent me from rewinding the
world of the pure and true inspiration of Chrictigy.
ity. We have the right also, we Priests, t0 tig np
You,
iF ee
z
our voices, to compkin of the ich j
this rae by forced a other Fagg
Priests of iny diocese, who offer te to fani-
lies formed by the Goprh whe widest of & well
reguiaied und free socia capitan ie which Chris.
tianity daily sents its benelite, you who uncess-
ingly ren:ind those who surround You of the sxcred
equality of duties, of rights, and of hope, inayine
the situation of the Catholic Missionary between
the masters and the slaves? ,
Suspected by the one class, or the
other, preaching to masters that justice whieh his
interest connternets ; snbmission, to those Whore
chains he should desire to break ; attempting toele-
vate the purposes, the dignity of beings wi
berty, abased in their own eyes, the preacher
fills a very sad mission. Ah! most traly, faith is
zood for ail; I pity those, whoever they be, whose
ife tends to its decline without this Hight; with
faith we can at mp to slaves, there is no con-
leaven for is end. iyi
Macintyre, and his successor and successors, being | all errors; may remove disease, keep off famine, | the heart of the master, but groans over a condition
}the Roman Catholic Bishop in Charlot
| said, in communion with the Charch of Rome, and
| being British born subjects, or daly naturalized,
lshalibe, and he ishereby declared to be a body |
name, and the said Pe:
sor and successors for t! 5
lof *âPae Roman Catholic Episcopal Corpdrition for
the diocese of Charlottetown,â shall, by the same |
|nume, bave perpetual succession, and a common
seal, and shail have power from time to time, by
and witlr the advice of his Vicur Genesal, or eftwo |
Clergymen, as hereinafter mentioned, to alter and
| renew, er change sach common seabeatt pler
Macintyre, and tis succes- i
iaud shall by the mame aforesaid, from time te tiwe, |
an Lat ail Limes herenfier, be able quad cap ote in
law, to have purchase, acqiure, posress, :
enjoy, for the luse and uses, eloemo
*
rf
asiicl, or educational, of the anid church of
in his diocese, or of the religieus community, |
i
peccie
| Rom
diocese, any Lands Tonements, or Dereditaments
wilhin the itsiand, aud tie same Real nite, | Cuuse, and to bey Your pra
or any part thereof, for the perpote aforesaid, from , vols
âimme to time, by
tetown wfure- | open the prison doors, and brenk the chain
| tivity.â
} Jesus Christ.â
en sof cap | which keeps the man ia a state of brutal abaeemeut.
; âThat isthe pure spirit of the Gospel and | We are ready to preach to the condemnedâtefollow
lof Jesus Christ; is it not thus that the Divine Ke- | them on to the scaffold, to live among galley slaves,
deemer of mankind annonnced His mission to the | ty evangelize the idiot, to dress the sorca of the
Corporate ia bis diocese aforesaid, ia deed and in| worki? âThe Spirit of the Lord is Lestowed on} wounded and the sick, we are ready to coosole the
Me,â said He, *âto teach the Gospel to the poor, to | slaves, we love them and they love us, but we ab-
wio are in bondage, liberty.â
. . i 1 om ie » 3 2 5 A 4
e time being, by the name | console those who weep,to cure the broken-hearied, | hor slavery. Ll regard with admiration the bishops
Ito preach deliverance to the captives, and to those |;
ind the es of countries where slavery exisix,
And, after the Di- becunse
ome , ait Adi-} 1 se t have confidence in them, in their re,
vine Marier, is it uot Si. Paul, one of Lis most fer | in their couscieutiousness, in their worth, in the ho.
veut disciple
s, whe shouted forth to the Pagan! nor of their sacerdotal character., They suffer be-
world the sublime oufery, â Their exist no longer} canse they know. as Ido, that onr religion is the
either masters or slaves, for we all are brothers in}
Well, even at this day, in Chris-/
n centuries of C
tian lands, after cighte:
' : '
, tere stil |
are SMLVOU.
your prayers,
. â : . i . .
; sason in which we uve, and alse of ews re- | prot it; they deserve to be indemiffed, and
and with the advice aud consent of } cently received froin distant conntries, where thâs | that is proposed to them, Those slaves, wien ther
religion of the free man.
Let us, therefore, be allowde to pray. Pray, sirs,
stianity. | pray carnestly, that a pacific solution of the Iawent-
those words of Jesus Christ, after thatery of | ablo problema of slavery may be devieed, mata
vul il ., | cousuumuated.
en, it is for this miserable and craelly-/ at once less advanced, and still more difficalt than is
ved portion of hn:uanity that Tcome to ask! seems. Those masters, th ey should be iderauilfied ;
Yes, let us pray; let oe pray tor | those shaves, they must beeivilized. Dacknowledge,
ior of any portion of the sume ct Zk Within his | Lose poor slaves. Andif Lfeel myself iiapetlied, }umony the masters (God save me froma blamiay thea
; : i at this hour, to commend to you this sud and holy | too much !) many act in good. faith; many wre bu-
al yers, ii is because of ie) mane; they have not made the eituetions they re-
Liu not ignorant thet this werk is
how
his Viear General, or of two Cleegymwea, ae afore-| grave quesiion issorety agitated snd towards which | shall be freed, their social organization will be a
of the said Corporation, for aly |
ing twenty-one yeurs, fro the day of the making
| intended to fill ap the two vacant French posts in} said, to let or demise by Indenture, under the seal | Lire
© gy
xeriod not exc
i theredf, provided that pon ay such Lense, the
reat eball be reserved, aud payabie to the suid Cor- | themen, pray.
poral ym, Veauriy, a id every 3
iin e of the suid Lease ; ax
ar during the con
,
saathmout af ocste and no
sun in gross, shall, under any pretence wirntso
, â~ :
ever, be taken forthe same, beyoud such yearly ltold the Note ist ; :
rent so reserved, as aforesaid, Otherwise the said | the South; that question, of com
Lease sail be utterly mall and yoid to all intents | «
and purposes whatseever ; and by the same name jt
teution of all Europe is direcied.
13,
is interrupted; blood dows in civil war.
*
Mot Fel
"nited States of America.
site liiile more of sya
|
ance, have had more influence
xf political predoi
han the question of slavery on the secesvion.out of | of Bord. a ix, assembled in council at La
are serious.
Tam! not plain, and is not easy of accoumlishiment, that
»ypathy than | we must pray that it mey be simplified and may be
Phe truth ) question, and slavery ixin nowise prepared forth;
t the old and the new continents are dis") but the priests of Christ Jesusâand all Christi
turbed; politicians harangue for and against; trade! inen of good hearts will ocerpy thensely
Ye. geu-jthat. Ina werd, l know the diffentties, â
li a great social crivis,in Which we | are exaggerated â we forget that interests, mutes
i ain indilcreat lookers-on, it is prayer wants, produce amor
! me that becomes ourgreat duty. Do not suppose, | agreement; but difficulties exist nevertheless, and
ve | sirs, that { may take part iu the lamentable quarrel |
'-â-hieh divides the âŹ
with
they
women relations, ties, needful
But it is exactly beeunse the work is
âal tariâle, or achieved.
My reverend brethren, the Bishops of the ince
ochelle
| Ă© * gee â . '
Princess Pia, daughter of King Victor Eummaanel, |
âew all in a row.â
â And your mother was a widow for the third
time.â
â Yes, bat mam didnât seem to mind it a tarval
sight. The next tellow she marricd was Jacob
Hayes, anâ the way mam does make him haze is
caution now I teil ve. If he does anythiag a leetle
out of the way, mam makes bim take a bucket
and white wash brusl: anâ go right up to te
buryinâ ground anâ white wash Uiree old phiuks,
jest to let him know what he may come to when
sheâs planted bim in the tame row, anâ got mar-
ried to the fifth husyand. So you eee my family
arn't a tarnal sight opposed to a dose of matri-!
mony.â
oe
A SHARPER'S OPERATION AT THE NATIONAL
TREASURY âUa Thureday afternoon, as a gentle
mao «ho had jast drawn some $1300 frow the
Treasury was leaving the building, some sharper,
who had been watching au oppertunity to make
a raise, overteok him, and told him that a mistake
had been made in counting the money, and asked
take it back to the cashier's room. Thinking
the sharper to be one of the employees of the De-
} and sister of the Princess Clothilde.
The King of Portugal has prohibited the Por-
tuguese Bishops trom going to Roine.
| hog pens, dirt in victuals, disputes in families, | GREAT BRITAIN.
\jyars with nations, water in the ocean, bad men | The distress in Lancashire amongst the factory
int America, or base women in France! No,Jordau | operatives is daily ingreasing, and the machinery |
Cla:ke, you may hope, you may congratulaie, you | pitherte in operation for mecting it is evidently | RUSSIA.
tay reason, you nay sheerâbut that cannot be.) preaking down. Every week, every month will, }
Phe thrones of the Old World, the Court of the | there is every reason to fear, add to the intensity |
} Universe, the governments of the world, may al! | of this distress, and the leading meu in Manchester
full end crumble inte ruin, the New World may „haye not met an hour too svon to consider the bes
commit the natioval suicide of dissolving this! moans of grappling with a difliculiy that cannot
Unionâbut all this unust occur before I joia the) pe shirked. This meeti iz, convened in the May-|
demecracy. lorâs parlour, on Thursday, disclosed a variety of
I joia the Democracy! Jordan Clarke, you) eyuficting views as to tie best mode of arresting |
know not what you say. When I join the dewo-) the calamity whici
cracy, the Pope of Rome will join the Methodist) patiy
âhurech. When Jordan Clarke of Arkansas is! 4 .
| President of the Republic of Great Britam, by! Âą in in favor of raising a fund from whieh to re-| iug in favor in the eves of the Cilaese.
âuniversal sefirage of a couteuted peopleâwihien | fieye by way of loan the necessities of the starving ; At Shanghai, on the 22nd March, 300 marines
Queen Victoria consents to be diverced from | men, women, and children. Vat the loan system, | @ sural arms men from H. M.S. Lew nde
Urince Albert by a county courtio Kansasâwhen | iy entire cash, doos net appear to have met wit), Went eut and drove off @ large body of rebels. |
Congress obliges by law James Buchanan to marry) yyych taver at the hands of the meeting. The | OM tie 24th Mareâ they madea similar excursion, |
a European Princessâwhen the Pope leases the eivie funetionary seemed vo think that the dis. YZ! even greater success; tor a plundering party |
Capitol at Washington for his City residenceâ) tress ought to be met promptly by the masters | {ll im their way, ladea with spoil. They dispersed |
jwhen Alexander ef Russia, and Napoleon of) why have made large fortunes by the exertions of |e patty and destveyed the loot. On this cea. |
Mrance, are elected Seuators ir Congress {roi | sy. gaetory bands, and he io oppusdd ta the appeare | sich one nuwine aud oe seaman were wounded. |
New Mexicoâwienu good men cease to go to âsensation articlesâ the London ail | On the 25th March the same force trem the In- |
from St. Petersburg.
t| his ambitious brother Constautine Viceroy of Po-|
laud,
The Czar has appointed |
When the revolution of 1830 broke out in |
Warsaw,another Constaative ruled there as Vice-
gerent. |
CHINA. |
Nankin is surrounded by the Imperialists,
Foreigners are allowed to visit Pekin under the |
passport system. âThe foreign alliances are grow- |
y 1 has overtaken the faetory ope- |
esin thiscountry. The Mayor of Manchester, |
jvited and plulantrophie gentleman, appears
ance vi i
ample, and beneficial a manner as any other
| A most important piece of news has reached us | COMPorte,
| answer or be answered unto, in any mauner what- |
| sig
| respectively, the said Roman Catholie Bishop and | which civil war has issued. Iam assured that the | in 1503, wick the new Bishops of the colonies, three
| bis saceessor and suecessors Bhall and may be able | Abolition party has rendered iteelf vdious by its ex- | years after the emancipation of the shaves in
jand capable in law to sue and be sned, im) pewd and | travagances ; while the slave-owuers often are mea | French possessions, sae say this solemm decla-
be iuplealted, answer and.Le answered inal! Courts | of geod faith and of good hearts. 1 am told of more | ration, ap roved by the Holy See:
| of law and equity and places Whatsvever, in as huge, | Catholics at the South than at the North; and of| â The Catholic Church has ever deplored theervel
» body | citizens enlisted in both armies, animated by equal | slavery in which a multitude of men are
or as any otherperson may or cau in law | patriotism, who, on cither side, sincerely believe | to the great detriment of their souls, and has never
: ; ceased to labor to remedy so great a calamity.â
I place under the protection of there noble words,
or equity sue or be sued, implead er be impleaded, | they are acting justly. : j
i It is said, it tne Uniou be reconstructed the eman- |
| soever; provided always that the lanfls, tenements | cipation of the slaves is not certain, and if the sepa-| and of so many other Apostolic utterances, the ar-
nnd premises so to be holden by the suid corporation ration become complete, that emancipation is not) dent vow which [offer
at this ervel slavery was
i siall net atany time exceed the annual value of |impossible. It is wished to persuade me that the | cease at length throughout all Christian countries.
four hundred pounds inany one Parisa in this Is- j interests of our mannfacturers are with the South,! Alas! sira, I know it, slaves ure not the only
lund; and further provided that the remtsand protits | of our Coumnerce with the North ; that we ought to) pressed an.ong men. There are countries, even
} arising from any such lands and prewises shall be | desive the upholding and the union of a people} Europe, there is an Iveland, a Poland, there ina
applied for the uses and purposes of the Charch or |W hom we aided to set free, and which serves to) Syria, w here op yression tukes a different form with-
Churches within the Parish where such lands are | counterpoise other nations, or, on the other side, } ont being a smaller evil. My com for one
situate, and not clsewere. _ we â pone the agyrandizement of a ponte anne not ee compete for others. = slo mvt
_ ae ali dias i ad _| whose example and encroaching spirit Inenaces the understand those men who resign themselveste at
ithe, eg ae ute ny ety Pr dt one jworld. I don't know all that. Eat what I do) evil from the embarrassment of choosing between
am the Bild Miocesg of ae sald Roman Catone | 1. is, that there are still foar millions of slaves | the different reasons for iddiguation. No, do not
Bishop, in whom = 9 tle endaneny or r= oe lin the United States, two miilious in the rest of | let us take one mischief asthe excase. for angther
Jand, eormenty ay wlegtoct stomata, situates YINK, | A nerica, tovether six millionsof slaves in Christian mischief. Let us labor to destroy the one, then af-
and being hater the eae island, rysipe , or suall, | corntries cizhteen hundred years after the Cruci-}| terward the other. Ferme, I will never yield
- Lamy be ea cate ea a ares, i. Lerwine for fixion; what I do know is, thut the horrors of civil | auything that is evil in fuct; I deplore all, and
om benelit of the a Catholic nuren, 1 | or have been let loose by this fearfal question,| would I had power to remedy all; aod if inv life
the suid Dioceses, from time to time, to convey, as- and that the peace of the world is threatencd, and | be long eno , With God's prace , Twill crate
eu, or transier by deed under bis hand and seal, lis already disturbed. And what Tam more happy | it wholly to contributing my feeble efioris and daber
or their hands and seals, in the usual lezal way,all iy knowâ is, that, by a recent and important actâa/to canse the disappearance, one by ope, of the
yartment, be handed over the package containing | heaven and bad meu to bellâwhen this world is
he money, and leisurely walked back to the money
suom, Where, after waiting tor some time, he found
turned upside downâwhen proof is atlord.d, both |
}clear and unquestionabie, that there is no Ged â
. ee . . â arn > reyjsife le wet teow . os ure |
| other papers te stimulate generosiiy ia districts | PCâąCUFe Ts visited the town they had capiured on}
ithe 2ist February; the rebels had returned to it, |
far renoved from the cotton trade. " ; |
thirteen days aiter they were driven out. On)
Wilmer & Sinith, in its review of the week,
that the sharper was an impostor, and instead of | when men turn to auts, and ants to elephants â 1 |
paving entered the room he had made his way | will change my political faith, aud come out on
through the regr of the building, and escaped with , the side of democracy !
Says a ad
Sinee our last review monetary and commercial
his prize. | Suppoisng that this full and frank letter will en-| transactions lave undergone no material change.
AR Ws ag NTI able you to Six upon tae period wheu I wili come | Cet on is rather dearer, and the last news from
Diwexajoxs oy tux Narioxat Carsroy.â âout a full growa democrat, and to communicate | America is likely to keep up the price, but the
Tue ébtiinendel the Capitol at Washington the game ty all whem if may concern i Arkausas, general business of the country remutins much the
ure thus officially stated: Whole length gf I haye the bonor to be, &e., oak tam a thea noted. The demand for accommo-
> th oe i i Phe W. G. BrowsxLow. | datien in the disconat market and at the Bank
jocleaitl veelâ tae coats iachâ of „ ay has erent in sg ons lene good bills
: . J2E feet: „ é RL ere Te ee ee r Eni lare taken a shade yuder the Bank mininum. In
142 feet 8 inches; width of old Capitel, 252 GIRRESPOND THRE | the Steck Exchange, the supply being abundant
feet 4 inches, height of dome abyve the base- | » 4 âthe rate for loans troin day today ou Government
ment flour. 264 feet; acres of ground actully | salad daveatelsieitn!-the â1 PSATIPE Ty,) Securities is only 14 per cent, The Bank return!
te covered, 153,112 agupre fect, gr more than SE onker Piauiae oe bow den shows that the increase in the secyritics is more |
<0 anil & hall oa Myloâ 9 , than counterbalanced by the inerease in the depo-
. the half LAN}, GREETING: | sits,and the reserye has, consequently, potent |
} The number of children bora out of wedlock Friends cx:d Fellow Sufferers, under a bad Land) some addition. The decline in the cvin and bul-|
in England during the year 1560 was 43,693, being | Tenure end worse Gocerament ; lion is of no importance.
64 per eent, of the whole number of children) Now that the last Sesyion of the worst Legisla- ° }
rg In Cumberland, where the proportion rose: ture with which a British Colony was ever afflicted | ted abroad with less disturbance of the mouey |
eveds of the recent foreign loans are bemg remi +)
x to ite merimen, it was double that amount; in| has passed over, I feel imperatively called on to market tian might have been apprehended, Tie |
j
ij
Mortulk it was 1@7; im Westmorloud, 106; in! address you on a subject upon which depends your | #uoeuat of Australian gold uown to be on the way |
Shropshire, 96; in Nottinghamshire, Os. Itwas | future freedom or slavery, according to the action | to this country is now reduced to ÂŁ347,500 |
also high im Bedfordshire, Suffolk, Herdforshire, | which you will take thereon. Many of you, Lhave| Cotton at sea: There is no Atmerican Cotton |
Lincolusbire, and the Nerth Riding of Yorkshire. | reasou te know, had wisdou) and discretion enough known to be at sea tor this port. The amount ou
The Registrar-General thinks that the proportion | to believe that you had potbing to expect from the | the water this time last year, was about 107 ,0U0 |
af illegitimate children born in Londouâ4-2 per | present thing calling itselt a Government, more) bales, âThe quantity of East fudian at sea, to ar-|
vent. in the is very probably understated. | than @ mock sympathy, the better tg deceive you, | rive by the end of August, is aboyt 172,000 bales, |
â There ix mueh greater facility for the suppression | while they would be arming the relentless, tyran-) against 230,000 bales same time last year,
of facts in large cities than iu simalior towns and nical Landlords with such durther powers as would |
villages.â : complete yoor ruin; but perhaps uene of you could
the 27th March a recoaneitering party proceeded |
towards Wong-ka-dza, about twelve iniles west |
from Shanghai. They found here that the rebels |
were in force and strongly entrenched. On the
3rd April a force left Shanghai and proceeded to |
Wong-ka-dza; they slept under arms during the
night ef the Srd, and on the morning of the 4th!
advanced and tok the place. Ta the fight Adaui-|
ral Hope and Dr. Escott were wounded. The |
Admiralâs wewid will coufine him on board for)
six or more weeks. His conduct in exposing hime |
self so muck is not according to military rule. |
Troops have been ordered from Tien-tsin to Shang: |
hai; it seems as if more fighting were in contenis |
plation. From Pekin we have news stating that!
the Imperial energies are beirg awakened, and |
that the foreign alliance is growing in approval |
day by day. Hereafter foreigners will be allow-
instead of, as heretofore, iu the capacity of guests |
of the Legation. |
a
THE BILL TO TNCORPORATE THE R..
CATHOLIC BISHOP.
A FEW weeks ago, the Colonial Secretary as-
° |
summed the novel and extraordinary character of |
Defender of the Catholics against the eneroach-| any ot
or any of the ruid lands, tenements, and hevredita-
ments unto the Roman Catholic Bishop for tire time |
being of the suid Diotese, by his corporate name,
aforesaid, to be bolden by the said Bishop and his
suecessor aid suecessors, in his said corporate name
aforesaid, for the purpose aforesaid, us provided by
this Act.
II. It shall not be lawful fer the said Bishop, or
his snecessor or successors for the time being, to
make or execute any indenture of lease as afore-
suid, of the hinds, teuemcats and hereditaments ac-
quired or held, or to be bereafier acquired or heid
by him ander and by virtne of this Act, withoutthe
con.ent in writing of his Viear-General; or in case
the said VicarGeneral shall be incapacitated by
sickness, infirmity, or any other cause, or shall
happen to be necessarily absent at the time, then
of two other Clergymen to be selected or named by
the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese; such
selection or nomination, and such consent to appear
upou the face of the indenture or lease intended to
be executed by the parties, aud to be testilied by
the said Bishop and ate tl or two Clergy-
wen us aforesaid, being made parties to and signing
Qa the whole, the pro-| ed to visit the capital under the passport system, | and sealing the said indenture of lease in the pre-
seuce of two credible witnesses, as consenting par-
ties thereto respectively.
IV. Nothing in this Act contained shal] extend
or be construed to extend in any uanner to confer
any y swipes or ecclesiastical rights whatsoever
upon the said Roman Catholic Bishop hereinbefore
mentioned, or upon his successor or successors, or
| other ecclesiastical person of the said Charch, in
communion with the Church of Rowe aforesaid.
V. In ease the said Roman Catholic Bishop or his
successor or succeasors, shall from sickness, iuirmity
her cause, be incapable of or be incapaci-
The Defence Committes of the House of Com-| ments of their own venerated Bishop; and he | tated from performing his or their duties in bis
message of the 8th Mareh, sent to Congress. by the | plagnes which afflict the human race. If Teould
| President of the United States, and geopten by ajact L would act. If L could speak I would speak.
| xrent biajorilyâmeasures prudent, equitable,peace- | If I can only pray â at least 1 will offer wp my
iful, have been proposed to put an end. to slavery, | prayer to God. Here, girs, you have the reason of
jand passed. Compensation is pro to all the
|my asking you to pray, especially for those in sla-
; States which agree to undertake in their territory | very. In these tonching universal prayers, whieh
jthe gradual abolition of slavery. No one can tell! you recite each day in the evening exercise, and in
; What will be the consequence of this proposition,
| becutuse it depond on the response of the Suites.
No one is under compulsion ; a limit is assigned to
ithe evil, and a veut is opened for it. For the first
{time in sixty years the central gavermment takes
jpart and commits the whole nation to a vigorous
effort against the evil. Wiihout being solved, the
question is then seriously under consideration, the
| step bus been made, a hope is opened. That makes
another motive for me, and an inexpressible need
to pray God that He may deizn to bless an enter-
prise the pacific solution of which must be ardently
desired.
i understand the objeciions of those who plead
for slavery; 1 do not desire to discuss them at
length. Net that they do not tell me that the slaves
are happy, and, besides, that established facts be-
come lawful through duration of time. | Slaves are
happy. Yes, perhaps, under good masters ; they
eut, they sleep, have some honrs of repose, perlaps
even inay be dissipated at pleasure ; but have they
the domestic hearth âbave they the familyâhave
they freedom? Poor disinterested ones of the hu-
man family, they have lost not only the right of
primogeniture, but all rights, and because they are
sometines allowed a plate of lentils, proclamation
is mude that they are heppy! As for the doctrine
of established facts, L have too often attacked it, in
its applications to the temperalities of the Church,
to accept its extension to its spiritual domain,which
it wost cherishes. Immortal souls! Ah! the Charch
Knows the price of souls; and if she has sometimes
| which the Churchâ commends to God the traveller,
the sick, the agonized, the affected of every kind,
after the afflicted, commend im_your bearts the
slaves. I ask it of you, sirsâI ask it of all my dio-
cesans. The moment seems propitions.
te aceomplish the work begun, und if your prayers
are not heard to-day repeat them to-morrow, until
| at lenst they be necepted of Him whon: we do not
vainly call the most wercifulâthe God ou high.
Accept, cherished co-laborers, the fresh aseur
ance of my deep and allectionate devotion to you in
the Lord
t Ferix, Bishop of Orleans.
Orvrass, Sanday of Passion Week,
April 6th, 1862.
= gp
IN our next paper we shail finish the debates |
| of the House of Assembly. The debates for the
Session of 1261 were not wholly pubihed until
| the 23d Septembe> of that yearâso that we stall
have completed the work three months avener that
we did similar work last year, while there ha
ibeen very little difference as to the extent of it
\in the two years. One of our objects in thi
hastening the publication of the debates wast
âput our readers in possession of the infermatios
â_ââ â9 060 @ -â- â
| Diocese, then his Viear-General, or the person ad- they contain as early as possible this smamer,
Lance Tarx âIt is not probable that with
@n army ot five hondred thousand of the best
soldiers in the world, with a nayy that can
md defiance even to thet of England, with in-
ex'austible resources, and with a national
ere dit standing higher to-day than that of any
3 evuutry in Evrope, that we will quietly sub-
by mit to the repetition of the indignities we
have reevived at the binds of England during
the dark bours of our national tguuble.â
Detroit Advertiser.
; ~~ âp 002 ae
A New Use ror Coat Ouw.âCoal Oil is said
te be a gure destroyer of bed-bugs. Apply plentiy
fully with a sma)l brush or feather, to the places
where they most do epngregate, The cure is et-
feetual and permanent. Gilt frames, chandediers,
&e., rubbed slightly over with coal oil, will not be
\ disturbed by fies,
Tax ow Baceioas.âA petition numeronsly
signed 4 spinsters of â aneertain agesâ âbetweer
es and 60 â resident in ~euodnte shele ri has
aentrusted, appropriately, to a jolly young
bacielow omar with iat locality, aa
a graduated tax upon vache ors beiween Zo aud
50, to commeyes irom Valeatineâs Day, 185:
shvuld form part of the financial scheme of
preseut â hed ee ot this tax many
years in the eld _conptry, at last, to our inti-
atter on 5â
~Quebee O'd T name in the fax paper
that, richer masters, the Proprietors. After spending |
proved them to deserve. It is therefore betterâ
even at such a stupendous cost to the farmers of |
the Islandâthat they have had an opportunity of
Proprietors, as weil a8 Gir extracagance m plung-'
the â right menâ for you to trast any longer with
the power to injure you or keep you in bondage.
You saw during the last Session enacted tie
greatest political humbyg, the most consummate
| piece of â hugkam,â the most daring act of hypo-
\erisy, ever before attenpted to be palmed, or
| Palmered, on a rational or civilized community
where British laws or freedom were thought to
prevail â that monstrous tissue of absurdity aud
deception, enlled âTHE AWaky,â or * Report of
theâ Land Commissieners!â Never were the
words of holy writ more literally fulfilled, â that
a servant cannot serve two masters.â The Elec-
tors, the great majority of whom are yourselvesâ
the âTenantryâought te he the masters of those
calling themselves your Representatives, having
by your suffrages at the last genera] election raised
them to a position which has enabled them to
betray you, in order to serve themselves and their
weeks 1 the mockery of legislating or passing Acts
squandering the reveque, plunging the Colony sti
dveper in debt, under the sparions pretext of serv-
ing the Tenantry, the a swindie is at once un:
nracked by the Duke of Neweastleâs despateh
Sir Samuel Cunardâs Prorgirtousâ
i ae
have formed so bad an opinion of our present rulers | so toned ge vt ee yal sa laboured, through several articles, to make it ap-
i vretehedly lare Thons ate) 3's ; a
as their wretehedly disreputable âaeticus have | original scheme, ;
|
ing the Colony so deeply in debt, tat they ; , for War made an indefinite re aly to the effect â P :
ing ây ceply Z «(Pegs that the subjeet had been under Ce dideration, but | man believed the vile calgumny; aud we did not |
America.
said that he had uo objection to produce a return
of the iron-cased vessels built and building by the
culty in laying betore the House from French ot-
ficial documents the number of jron-cased vessels |
built and building for Franee. The naval com-|
missiouer of this country in France had every fa-)
cility for visiting the Preneh) dockyards, but he
Was net awure that any special official document
bad been furnished to lum,
get said, in reterence to the quality of jren sup-
plied to the Navy, natice had been give of closing
relative te the Award of the Land Commussion-| #!! contracts for iren, and after consultation with
the|ers,â the arbitraijon clause, &e., &e., recklessly | Cettain seieutifie geutlemen, tenders for a
i supply cf iron wouid be issued, which iron would |
be subjeeted to a special test.
and} have been a blunder ov the part of d Ele for him; and the Jast part of th Bl
who, taking eeriously a joke with 7 ans Righe, a the first section very
pear that there was an sbominable attempt made |
Iu the Commons a question yas asked by Mr by certain Catholic members of the House of As-|
4 , t > : wil. | . .
wird, whether the Horsfali moyster gan Fala | sembly, with the knowledge and concurrence of
the Warrior and other targets, No intelligent
The Syerstary) the whele Catholic population.
think it worth our while to write mneh upon the
echelons eee pace the Netaare | subject at the time the Colonial Secretary made |
â a an ND OU Fepakions W221 the | himself so ridiculous by pretending to be a friend
ee oe eerie of the Catholics. The Bil to incorporate the Bis-
hop having, however, appeared jn the â Royal
Gazetteâ of Wednesday last, we have great pleas
sire in transterring it to our columns. Any one
who can read will see at a glance that it delegates
no power te the Bishop that can be in the slightest
| degree detrimental to the civil interests of his
flock; but, oa the contrary, secures the Church
against serious casualties that might occur in the |
| event of the Bishop dying without making a will, |
In answer to Lord R. Grosvenor, Lord C, Pa-) because he liolds lands under the will of his pre-
decessor, which might be claimed by his own kin-
dred, if, by sowie dispensation of Divine Previ-
new dence, he were deprived of the power or opporta-|
nity of making a will, The Bill to give a corpo-
The Parliamentary rifle enntest turve ont to rate trust to his Lordship virtually makes a will
nothing had been determined on,
In answer to Mr. Lindsay, Lord Palmerston
British Gevernment, arid there would be no diffi-
which the Speaker! clearly stetes â that the rents and profits arising
| ministering the Diocese, shall have the same pow-
ers us are by this Act conterred upou the Roman
Catholic Bishop of the suid Diocese.
Vi. Nothing herein contained shall affect or be
! | , constracd to atiect, ia any manner or way, tie
convincing gil of you, by their partiality to the, „2„¹ 40 opportunity of testing its power against his Lordship, to encroach upon the civil rights of "iz! ts of Her Majesty, Her Ieirs or Successors, or
of aly person or persons whomseever, or of any
body politic or corporate, or of any Church War-
dens, or auditors of accounts in any Reman Catholic
Chureh in this Island, or jy auy Way to abridge,
diminish or take away any of the rigiits, privileges
aud advantages now enjoyed and possessed by any
pewholder, or any person having any right, title or
mterest In any pew or sittingin any Rowan Cytho-
lic Church in this Island, such only excepted as are
hereinbefore mentioned and provided for.
Vil. This act shall not come in force or be jn
operation wutil Her Majesty's Royal approbation be
thereunto had and declared.
oe ial eo 5
We invite the attention of our readers te the
following Pastorzl Letter of the Bishop of Orleans,
France, on the great question of slavery which
how occupies so promment a place in the melan-
holy and disastrous war between the Northern |
and Southern States. The Leiter is a splendid
plea for universal liberty; and pays a high tribute
to Mr. Lincoluâs Cabinet for the progressive ten-
dencies manifested by it, in proposing, as it lately
did, to abolish slavery, and pledging the national
treasury to indemnify those planters who may be
induced to give up the institution. Orange bigots
take great pleasure in representing the Catholic
made sacrifice of part of her rights, even the most
incontestible, whea the higuer interest of her mis-
sion lins not made it her duty to maintain them, it
has been to reserve the right of suyiag to all the
| World, with all the ardor ef her love, * Your souls,
give me your souls aud keep the rest.â Da mibi
anhnas, Catera tolli tibi. Nor let me be asked either
to discuss the theoretic questions of slaveryâlet
me vot be reminded thatall sacient social conditions | of the House of Assembly â owing to the
have resied upon thatâdo not seek to dgmonstrate oe ies n : House
wo me, by force of hypothesis that can never be ve. | M@80ner in which we were treated by the
slized, that slavery is not pylawtnl in jtself, eon- | with regard to courpensationâouly that we cob-
sidered In a certain way, under certain conditions. | _- : :
I let alone abstract theories, and 1 look ut the tucis, sidered it very desirable to have the country the
L look at the number of times those conditions have roughly informed on political affairs previous to
an election, feeling well assured that the most
us to be prepared for a general eleetion, should
it take place this year, as the information W
be very useful before but not after such a proceeding.
Indeed, we should not have given up s0 inueb
our space (about 120 columns) to the proceedings
any way, one single sentence that cane from
demned by slavery to remediless abasonimnt. J do
F observed the utinost impartiality in the publication
Redewmpijon.
it is sv conye-
hands of the Reporters.
not an opinion, but a dogimaâlet it be well under-
been met in history, and why, humanity being con-
stituted such as it js, they might occur. 1 look not
at the exceptional case, but ut the state, the foun-| tensive and speedy publicity of the debates
dation even, of life and of huwan dignity, con- promote the interests of the Liberal party and of
mo age oo mpeolt pone = Te we ractions and hypo-| the country generally, and be very damaging
Hesis. Certainty, f would have much to say upon love Te desi that bave
the origin of this obstinate and protracted wolteean) the Goversenenty.«: âWe > Geely â
plage spot. ha did man reduce man to slavery ?
defy its explanation to me unless by original sin. | of se debat: might have sup
How did the slave again beeome the equal of 7 hs these dubai, apihengh we ve have
miasicr ? A doy ine explanation unless through the | ptessed any part of them we liked. pte in
Slavery is so that its begin- | pejthe itten 2% energree altered
ning caynet be lavery i iy x neither omitted nor exaggerated, ner
nient, that its ending cannot be comprehended.
If [ touched upon the theory, I would show that
the untiy of the human family, which, with us, is
: Se icon
stood, a dogma, and even one of the grounds of our WE are indebted to the politeness of we date
faith â_ one ulso a dogina of scicaceâI would | in this City for a file of papers, of the latest
show that the unity of the human family, the prin- : âane hich we observe
ciple of digniiy, of eqaality, of freedom, of A sien from South Australia, in one of w âa
nity among mankind, condeams and rebukes|an interesting account of the reception of His
slavery ; and I would refer to the works of Blu-
menbach and of Tiedemann, of Humboldt and of Exeelleney Sir D, Daly, at 4 * No.
âwe wil edeavouy (0 make room in our next
Geoffrey &. Hilaire; I would cyli upon my learned
HISSELLANEOUS,
een ne no =
Parsox Eaowntow.âThis Rev. gentleman) Bini !! Yes, â the Proprietorsâ Relief Hill,â the | pa
was fermerly located in the State of Tennessee
STARVED
The other night two wowen died of want and pri
vation in the atreets of London. One was dircovee
el by a iceman in the morning, sitting
crogched np position on a stair.â
was quite dead.
whe deep night fell o'er Lonton,
With its riot amd bustle aid diaâ
It fell o'er the streets of the Mty,
It fell o'er the haents of sin
Were there none with hearts of pity
Teo take the poor Wayfarer in!
She walked through Christian Loudon
Wretched, barefooted, forlorn!
With piouding hanger pinched features,
With aspect weury and worn
And the wid March blast, as 4 hurried past,
t
Fluwered ber ramnent tora
No home in all wide Londen! -
She shrunk from the ch Ne wir,
Bhe drew her tuitered antle
* Round her shoniders eold and bare,
And from the beat of the rain and sleet
erouched on the lonely stair.
And throagh the streets of London,
The heediess crowd went on;
No eve saw the friendloss wouan,
r~ ' = a | judging by ibe amount of christian charity âwhich
renova â
doctor's in the neiguborhood, it was found that she}
true to the Lnien cause. He was imprisoned for.
a time by the secessionists, but ulttnaiely gat {ror
~ and came North, where he is creating quite a aen-
~bention, Feav, if any, will doubt hig loyalty; but
he professes for the clergymen of the South, asme
jare of opinion that he has no more piely than is
necessary for the diseburge of the duties of a
| Doctor of Divinity.
i Before a convention of Methodist ministers at
| Cincinnati, this man, speaking of men ahd affairs
in the South, said :â ?
| «"Dhis thing called segession originated in falsg-
rried his proposal for a shooting match, earried
dietuyp of Sir Saaned Canard and the Proprietory | a solemn challenge | frou him to ~~ ogg
Govermment whom you elected! instead of the) The strange part of the aflair is, not tha
that the Chancellor of England should have been
the great political kumbag! How torcibly it re- or
âtaken wiih chat.â
minds one of the fable of the âmountain in labour,â
from which emanated the â ridieulous mouse.â o
The perturbation of the Proprietory Tory Go-| Commons on Tuesday evening. Mr. Berkeley 5
vernmenf during the last two years ends in the) ayyyal notice of motion about the Ballot having
production of that ugly unfledged embrye bantling | stood bigh on the list, the benches on both sides
called âthe Award,â (new transniuted inte the | were nearly empty et seven o'clock â Lord VPal-
â Proprietersâ Relief Billâ) under the careful mid-| merston, anwng the rest, having gone: either to
wifery and nursing of the gallant Cols. Gray and | qoze or to dine, While the member for Bristol was
Haviland, which is scarcely permitted to draw expected to repeat his arguments in favor of his
breath ere it is strangled ky Sir Samuel Cunard, ! pet propositiv:. Bat Mr. Berkeley had no notion
and so passeil) away the hypocritical mask of the | of taiking to empty beaches when he saw an op-
! hood, theft ang perjury. Floyd did the stgaling,
{the masses of the people did the lying, and four |
teen United States Senators frém the Cotten
| States the perjury. While in the Senate in the)
| day time they made a show of keeping theiroaths,
but at night they held their seeret caucuses, plan-|
} ning secession, and advising their leaders to seize
the prominent forts of the South asd aris of tin-
| portance wherever they could fiud them.
âLT have no doubt there are better men in hell
or in the Penitentiaries ef this or any uther State, |
{than theâ prominent leaders th this secession
movement. And I am sorry to say that the worst)
| class of men now in the Southern Contederacy are |
the Episcopalian, Methodist, Baptist aud Presby-|
iterian preachers. High funetionaries iv the
i
present Ministry, who are thus so ignominiously ,portumty of afealing a mgreh upon lis ââ
exposed to the indignant scorn of an injured and) and observing a majority of his friends im the
hitherto too confiding Tenantry. Like the black-| }{ouse, he quietly answered the Speaker's call by
leg gang who are sure to kang themselves wien |
allowed plenty of rope (opportunity for mischiet), | time. E .
so the worthless crew te whom you iutrusted tac) conded, poor Mr. Brand ran aghast into the lobby
state affairs of our lithe: Colonyâwho always had) to peat up bis frees, but he was too late: the
the eill to injure you â no sooner had the means | Speaker pyt the question, ayes and noes, and just
of doing so than they coynaenced to rivet: your
propHetory chains; and having plenty of rope, â i
they ceased not until they hung themselves so high just in time to. be too late to speak against ime.
that they now Aang like so many political scure-
crows to warn the tenants for ali time to come to
beware of such treacherous demagogies, and to
point the finger of scorn at them during the next
geieral election, and tell them that they have
simply moving that
ruffled by such incidents, Was unable to cancea!
his chagrin on this occasion, which of course ouly
served to jnerease the laugh against him.
Report of the Land Commissioners; aud so ends | shoykl have sup wad a joke to be earnest, but)
There was av ainusing scene in the Honse of) hard, in the House of Assembly, to make if appear
his Hill be now read a second | the power of taxing the private property of any | tions will read it with the same pleasure that we
The motion having been as concisely âa Catholic to any extent the Bishop pleased. The
as he declared that the ayes had if, Lord Palimer-
stot rushed mto the House ainid roars of laughter,
7 | a â ah . na
The noble lord, who seldom allows himself to be | remain intact as ever under the Bill.
from any lands and premisesâ (made over to him
in his ecclesiastical charaeter) â shall be applied
for the useg and purposes of the Church or Churches
| within the perish where such lands are situate, and
Mr. J. G. Pope laboured very
Flonreng and
Church a8 the enemy of progress and civilization,
Ieport of the Duke de tad
and the patroness of epiritual and temporal en-| 9, 5 would set
thralment. We advise the people of â Boyne roa - ko 4 Wallen â he ok nde.
mtiquity, ain t ;
Lodge, No. 614,â to read M. Dupanleppis Letter Augean Cochin upon" Moder oe work a) yt
before going ta one of these monthly meetings at | are men os Gritere cf other authority fh, Here
we a vain te whe, a â
âwhich publie officials anuse themrelves by indatge) ed ey Christ chd hie Chek tite, th
ing im rant, falsehood, seurrility andy blasphemy the eferts of science fn desperution, this Chal
, a â , dogma of the unity of ot as .
against the religion professed by nearly iow eo muse perieh thee. dignity. the Irateri tt ea
been or shall be given up to trustees or Church | our population, who | y and inaffensively pay of maukind, Ir.â let ts pas from the iberty
their share of the p xes, to support the of-
Wish 16
_, | shown by experience, that siny
the principles and practices of the Charch with | the initiation and the training of Hoenig nat ber
oo
â
not elsewhere.â
$F
that the Bishop's Incorporation Bul would have
the effect of alienating any lands that may have
wardens in any particular parish for the support
of the priest of that parish. His brother the Co-
lonial Seeretary has since attempted to spread the
same false impression; and, indeed, he went fur-
I do not wish to answer anythi . .
z | jected in favor of this sad A ig yay MAY be of,
> .inls who are thus permitted to abuse them. The | discuss doctrinal subtleties: ry
ficial 1 " " ut 1 ask thet
Letter of the French Bishop eloquently expounds | truths of experience be not rejected, &
a - sabe
, : : afta. eae -e are con- | }t endurcs the more it oppresses ; Bat
ther, by trying to prepagate the abominable delu- | regard to universal Âą nner aa i : tends the more it degrades; and a ml wea
; itis : â. mally, Pe , ~iudiced reader . ina-| itself by its sole actic Y TAVely
ee at. under the he Bishop would have | fident that unprejudiced readers of all denom itself by e action. You refine
sion, that, under the Bill, t â . free, becanre, you say, they are 50 Set slavey
liberty ; and J, 1 tell you that this lerapacis.
enjoyed in its perusal. kept alive by servitude, if not erented Wonâ
| : i . that it canses the slave to te YM, ang
, concluding part of the rst section and the whole also the teaching of expen the Me thie
of the sixth section furnish the very strongest re-/ paSTORAL ADDRESS OF M. DU-| the day toe poms A phere af ori per of
4 > ~ â . > my > > tend | CONSE nce equa y Pies * sore
futation of the allegations advanced by Mr. James PANLOL P, oe ye seaman TO ll â, the ignolte fn ame laid
aud Mr. W. H. Pope. Ludiv'dualand trust rights HIS CLERGY ON SL: ; re a oe oot
ee : ee . in 1639, by Benedict XTV, j :
he Bis- ELOQUENT APPEAL TO ALL CORISTIANS. XVL. in 1839. âThe pe wd pĂ©ectn aed lent
dhsmmeonen f family tie, condemned ym
he byte b dr bartall thle We dual: 1 From the New York Evening Post J co... the decrease i <
rights of any individual or parish on e Se LD ihe teeeunditeall by our latest foreign papers | of the slave but of the master, fur it goes the
and, in fact, his Lordship can do nothing in his the circular of Lishop Dapanloup of Orleaus,France,
hop can no more interfere with the established
Nor heard ber pitect's monn,
. ily heart that Wie haman ! â shat tcl a
er oe t e the homeless one ! ing. Meu who have met in our general conier-|
j ences with sowe ef these aged brethren whom 1}
Death stalked through the streejs of London now see around me, preach as chaplains en Sab-|
fut jess unknown was he;
He aw the woman lving
in her lonely misery ;
He took ber hand, and in accents land,
uid ** Come away wih ine.â
j
A Presbyterian minister in Knoxville invited all,
denominations to hold a Union prayer meeting hisk
pray to the Lord to suk Burusideâs fleet and raise |
Lineolnâs blockade.
- Pom td clerics } Y besieged 2 |
Tay dawned on stately Loudon: posed of many old clerical rips, who besieg 1:
bath, but swear and get drunk throng) the week. |
Episcopalian Church are now drinking aud syvear- | taught you by their political delinquency to trust
your interests into the hands of better men in
future. Pheiractions have proved to youthat they
are not * the right men in the right place ââthat
they have done nothing for your interestsâthat
although they purchased the Selkirk Estate and
Lot 54, they only partially aeied on âthe Land
Purehase Actâ passed by Mr. Coles and iis friends, |
And at it they went, Âąom-!| aid that so corrupt and so selfish have they been
that they refused to show the correspondence
sent arrangemeris, Her Majesty, with the Royal
rive on the following morning.
Court Movements. â According to the pre-
of forbidding the master to teach the
and to write in favor of liberty. clave ÂŁ0 dead
family aud suite, will leave Balmoral on the 3rd
proximo, for Windsor Castle, where she will ar-
The Court will
remain at Windsor until the 16th of June, when
her Majesty will take her depagture for Osborne.
Preparations are geing on for the warriege of the
| Prineess Alice, which will take place at Osborne
about the latter end of dune, or early in July.
The Princess Alice and her illustrious concert
i i ri su yi hich be discusses the great political question
-orporate capacity without the written consent of |in which he discusses the yrew
corporate capacity of this country audage. It will be ae pat he
most candidly approves âof President Liucon's
Kimancipation policy : Ru od be the âe piped thet Dam, de rd
GexteeMEN axp Fritow-Lagoners :âYou sel Sdtow etait in the-tinnea SIX millions of yy
dom aliow the fur distant echoes of foreign rlities ae aah po Meda ner pistes, in Tract, 4
to reach you. Your presbytery, which I so love to! viganons ian young girls, chit
visit, is the resting-place of peace, of contemplation, Is it not yer ti ay Phe *
The a « » â
the Vicar General, or two other clergymen, as afer Of God, sd children âof tomy Tae ATM
set forth in the third section of the Act. âya
The Colonial Secretary may say that the Bill
now printed is not exactly the same as the one in-
troduced by the Hon. Francis Kelly, as Chairinan Heaven!
The san shone warm gad bright
i throne of grace, heaving and setting like an eld whieh took plice in the purchase of these proper-
} Tennessee ram at a gate post, thai God would
send lightning and siorm and raise the blockade.
| And the Lord did give them a raiseâat Roanoke
Leland, and with the kind of lightning and storm
Ou the womazi's crouching figure,
In its melayeholy plightâ
On her garnieuts torn and meagre,
On her features still and white
Starved in the streets of London!
fet mayhay a mother hud sunile i q â iw
ott sities dave of happiness {make use of the following words on the Lordâs
In the laaghing eves of her childâ | day; which he sgad he would give to show the de-
Those eves that how stare with siouy stare, | gradation at the pulpit,
* And gleam With mdianee wild. marks he said that * Jesus Chijst pasa Soytgern
man, and all his apostles were Southern meu save
Starved in the streets of Lendon! | Judas, who was fron the North, and that he would
*Mid its wealth, and the ceaseless swell
(* âo sige ree raising high | from one printed and bound north of Musun and
n e heavet |
O ve who dwel : , :
yo sneyeer Dixon's line. I regard the churches in the
Iu the mist of riches and laxury, . â mre
Sayâis it well !âIs it well! South ruined, and financially they are in a bad
| More recently m Washiggten st a public recep-
| tion given him, he said :â
. <~2- CO
OPPOSED TO MATRIMONY.
P yey Rey eet yes aN i} men God Almighty ever let live. MeClelian was
* Wal, no, T rather guess net, seeinâ as how my gallant, able, and would come out all right. Fre-
mother has had foar husbands, anâ stands a pretty |) nt was the sort of a man in the time of war.
smart ehanee for having auether.â | He would make a spoou or spoil a hern, Had
â Four husbands? Is it possible?â lold Hickory beew alive when Floyd began to steal,
*O. ves. Yousee, my motherâs christened name } he would have said, Floyd, by the God that â
was Mehitable Sheets, anâ dad's name was Jacob | Moses, this thing .uust stop, aud ahs ay big tama
Press; anâ when they got watried the printers said Buchanaa was that miserable mockery of Fy mae
it waa puttinâ the sheets to press. Whey L was) at Wheatland. His house oxi ag i.
born they said | was the Grst editions, Anâ you aearehed tor arms, be reppletepne tot weg Gee
sgâ, mother used te be the tarnalist critter to go, being a Doctor of Divinity. A t he ; o âti
te eveninâ meetinsâ. She used to go out pretty | tar under his jacket, i reacher as he was he woulk
late every night, anâ dad was afraid I'd get iv the | see the infernal rebellion aud all its abettors inte
same habit, so he nsed to put me to bed at early we} uvernal Pe ac before he would join thea,
dielicht, cover me up with a pillar, ailâ put me | Of Secession he said: | : .
ae p with a beet âack. Wal dad had ok up! * Thies w as the epirit of Scere, not â, in
every aight anâ let mother in; if he didnât get down | Peunessee, but allover the: outh a wart " opt
anâ opes the deer pretty darned quick whea she of heli, and yet we had meu at the : orth Yo 99 ore:
cum, ueâd ketch partic'lar thander; so dad used | tulze with if. (Applause aud teeth eae
to sleep with his head ont of the winder, soâs to} lt he ow ed tweive ot the nest reve ting w â-
wake up quick, anâ one night Ke get his head a aad depraved scoundrels the world ever saw to lis
little toe far eut, anâ he slipped out altogether, anâ satanie majesty, he would make a tender of twelve
down dad cuin, caflumux right dow; oy the paver northerners 85 ww pathiz nig with SECESSION, (Great
ment, anâ smashed him in ten thousand pieces!â | applause and langhter ) They might deem hun se-
* What! was he killed by the fall?â | vere and bitter in his denunciation | of traiters ;
âWal, no, not exactly by the fall. I rayther) but they must consider that they i the South took
kinder sorter guess as how it was the sudden fetch | it as a persona! matter. These Northern treiters
up ow the pasewent thet billed bim. Kut maim | @ught not to be tolerated on Broadway. âThey
she cum iu, auâ Gaand bing layinâ thar, and ehe | ought to be ridden ov a rail out of the North, and;
had hime swept up together, anâ put in a coffin, anâ | mote to show tieir haud. (Applause, and cries
had a hele dug i the buryiaâ grounâ, anâ had dad | of suame- ) sia i, :
put ia anâ buried up, auâ had a white oak pink â ~ ile closed with the belief that MeClellan and
put up to his head, anâ had it white-washed all the Union Generals would drive secession inte the
» ,
over for a tomb-stone.â :
âSo your mother was left a poor lone widow?
â Wal, yea, but as she did'nt mind that much,) An Arkansas correspondent, who probably
it wasânt long before she married Sain Hite: you | Wanted to â wake upâ Mr. Brownlow, wrote to
see she married Hide because he was just dad's! the latter, stating that he had learved with pleasure
the sea.â
a, aad she wanted him to wear out dadâs clothes. upon what âhe cousidered reliable authority,â |
Wal, the way old Hide used to hide me was a) that Mr. Brownlow was about to juin the Deuw-
caution to my hide, Hide had a little the toughest | erats, and asked for the probable date ot that ia-
hide of any hide except a bull's bide, and the way | teresting vecurreuce.
Hide used to hide away liquor in hw hide was a least data tor the date, as follows:
eantion to a bullâs hide. Wal, one cold day old
Hide got his hide so full of whiskey that he pitched
bead first inte a snow bank, and there stuck anâ!
friz to death. So mam had him: pulled out, an '3Hh ult., and hasten to let you know the precise
diad him laid out, and then she had another buryiuâ | time when L expect to come out and formally an-
grownâ anâ bad hin buried, anâ the» she had an- | nownce that I have jeind the Democratic party.
other white oak piank put up at his lead anâ) When the sua shines at midnight, ant the moon
white-washed all over, anââ" at midday â when man forgets to be selfish, o
â So your mother was again a widow.â | Deinvcrats lose their inclinations to stealâwhen
âO, yes, but I guess she didu't lay awake long | nature steps her onward march to rest, or ail ihe
to think about it, for in about three weeks she | water courses in America flow up streamâwhen
married Johu Sitongâanâ he was the strongest! flowers lose their odor, and trees shed no leavesâ
headed cuss you ever did see. He went a fishinâ | when birds talk, and beasts ef burden Tanghâ
the other day anâ got drowned, auâ he was 30° when dammed spirits swap hell fur heaven, with |
tarnal strong headed, I'l] be darned to darnation | ihe angels of ligt, and pay them the boot in mean |
if be didnât float right agin the current, auâ they whiskeyâwhen impossibilities are ia fashion, aud |
found hit about three miles > ie FER 89 | ho proposition is tuo absurd to be believed, you
jt took three yoke oâ eattle to haul him eut ral, ggay ereJit the report that I have joiued the deav-
mam had bine huricd aleng side oâ tother two, anâ ti 8 â rT d ;
had a white oak plank put up et his head, a.â I join the Democrats! Never, so long aa there
white-washed all over niece, se thereâs three on | are sects in churches, weeds in gardens, fleas in|
KNOXVILLE, Ancust 6, 1861.
| which they did not expect in answer to prayer.)
| Lalso heard a Presbyterian minister in Koxville |
lu the course ef bis re-)
| sooner read a text from a bible bound in be}! than |
: . |
â The leaders in the rebellion are the very worst |
Gulf of Mexico, as the devils drove the swine into |
Mr. B. gave the date, or}
Mr. Jordax Clarke :â1 have your letter of the |
contemplate visiting Switzerland mn the autumn.
âLhe contemplated trip of Queen Victoria to Co-
burg has been made the occasion for addressing
ito her Majesty an invitation on the part of the Aus-
tieularly of Lot 54, the tile to whieh was known | tian Court. It âa to be buped that her Majesty,
to be bad during the fast half ceatary. They have | @fer a stay at Reinhartebrunn, nodosa Il oa
taxed you heavily â more thin doubled the debt} meet the Crowa Princess of | visit, wil pay s
of the Colony, and nearly destroyed its conunerce vist to the Lmaperer at the Palace of Greinburg,
by bad management â almost paralyzed the guod | in Upper Austria.
of the Free Education Act by wortiiess appoint |
ments, especially the School Visitor, who pockets |
|
ties, Which leaves them under the inevitable sus-
picion of hiding thereby seme palpable or rasealiy
â shuffling, in order to cover their culpability aud to
screen the bad Utles of the properties, more par-
FRANCE.
tur doing nothing, unless going about eecasionally | pyres of cotton cloth to dispense with the use of
on the work of deception, canvassing for the Pro-) A yyevican cottou. It appears thata piece of clot i) Lougwort lâs ebjectionable clauses, was printed in |
prietory faction who a pointed him, instead of) has heen manufactured af a common plant whick |
| visiting the schools as âequired by law; and 80 | vrows wild in the fields, and which will shortl
| disgraceful has his neg} gence been, that the Ge! he exhibited to a commission composed of manu-
vernment were both w'caid and ashamed to have jfactucers, The discovery bas been communicated
iis report exposed by Lir. Coles and others in the
Assembly, that it was kept back uutil the very |
last day ofthe sessiol. \
to make known the base hypoerisy, the hollow | ried the day.
pretensions, the v.le deception, the cunning rascal | js appoiuted to the command of the French army
ity, the predetermined traud to be practised on) at Rome. i
to the Emperor, who takes great interest hi if.
The Paris correspondent of the Morning Herald
. : The Journal de Rouen announces a most im-| yolyed in it was considered sound. The draft Bill
to hundred pounds a yewr of the people's money portant discovery which will enable the manutae-|
it any proof were wanting | writes as follows:âThe clerical party have car-
General the Count de Montebetlo
. ; . ct The General is well known for his
the Tenantry by the present party in power, it is! Ultramontane tendencies, and it is believed that,
. . oe f praver and of charit„. During Leat you do not) © ithe, sal Cente
of the Special Committee appointed to bring in the Swell in oe parsonage! all day you dwell in your -_ vonage â = âs to pone
Bill. We admit all that. But the only difference haga hoping yonem so cong a oo eee which you would not he should do to van. ~
st ve tei, @nd ou yo c 4 > eek 3 : |
between Mr. KellyâsBill and the one that passed, God to preach und'to pray, invoking for mea the which you would year iii
is, that the former contained two clauses which
âformed part of the Bill introduced by the Ton
John Lougworth ia the previous year, which was
i supported by the Hon. J. C. Pope, and which,
notice and pardon of God, beseeching men to think
with you upon thesdeath of Jesus Christ, and to
unite with the sufferimps of His cross the sufferings
of their lives. Ido not come to withdraw your at-
tention in the midst of your pious engagementsâl
come to beg for a prayer. DPruyer! that is our po-
âafter being severely criticised by the Dake of
Newcastle, and described as âcarelessly drawn
up,â was disallowed, although the principle in-
introduced by Mr, Kelly, and containing Mr.
lities ; that is our great interest inthe events of this
\workd. To speak of God to nen, and to speak of
lmen to God, that is our mission. And surely it is
no small matteroeven inthe order of earthly inte-
rests, so ardently contended about amongst men ;
for m it is God, who holds in His hands the hearts
of peoples and rulers, aud bends them as He will ;
the âIslanderâ of the 23d May, accompanied by
such remarks as might lead many persons to sup-
pose that it was the Bill actually passed; but the
itis He who now sorrowfully abandons them to
their course, and now stops them on the verge of
ithe precipice and draws them buck, willing or un-
willlag, through diis mercy: whether a hylitning
flash of whut is happening comes to show at a
glance the depths of sin into which they are preei-
real fact is, that after some debate, the whole
jlouse agreed that it would be better to pass the
it would meet all the requiremeuis of the case;
and the new draft was accordingly introdueed by
to be found in âthe Proprietorsâ Relief Bill,â inthe | jy addition to his military command, he will re) Mr. Kellyâwas passed without a dissenting veice,
preamble to which it says: âIn making which last! present, as Ambassador, the French conrt at the
direction or provision (relative to the arbitration) Vatican. âThis appoiatment fully confirms a tele-
| the said Commissioners exceeded the authority | gram which you wiil have already received, to the
intended to be given them by the Assembly and | effect that the charge affaires, M. de Bellune
the said Proprietors.â Now, in the name of come | has assured Cardinal Antonelli that the Pope need
mou sense, how could Sir Samuel Cunard and} yot entertain avy apprehensions as to the policy
other Proprictors know what authority the ma-| of the Lmperor, which would continue in cou-
jovity of the Assembly intended to give the so-called | formity with the speeci of M. Billault, in the
Royal Commissioners, weless it had been com-| Senate. M. Billaut, you will remember, stated
municated ta them hy their tools in the Assembly, or | in the most explicit manner, that the French
previously understood, known and agreed on before troops would never leave Rome uatil a reconcili-
the Commission was sought or asked for? Uere | ation was brought about between the Pope and
then is the gigantic traud, the huge swindle, the | the King of Italy. The news is not sufficiently
notorious, Well contrived conspiracy against the) known yet te be able to ascertain how the public
sudering tenautry, ummasksd, laid epen to view.! will receive it, but the Ultramontanes will do
The said preamble stated previously : â And } their best to exaggerate and the Liberals to di- |
we believe, from either Protestants or Catholics,
and will be found, as published below, to be unob-
jectionable in all its provisions, Mr. Seeretary
Pope must be very hard pushed for political capital
when he makes it the ground of an attack against
certain members of the Liberal party, who, if the
Bill were a bad oae, were certainly not mere liable
to censure for passing it than the Tories were.
An Act to Iacorporate the Roman Catholic Bishop
corporate the Right Reverned Peter Macintyre,
New Brunswick Act, without any alteration, as |
tn Charlottetown, if
Whereas it is deemed just and expedient to-in-
pituting. themselves, er that a holier light endows
them withfarae wisdom. Be it a» it may, gentle-
jmen, the most unthinking know well that aflairsdo
not moré on here below without the powerful con-
currence of cirenmstances, which they call the hits
of chavee and we cull the direction und the act of
God. They too often look upon them as blind men.
More eulightened, we do not cease to raise to
heaven a voice, trustful and pexceful, for the happ?-
nevs, the progress and the fature of the whole
world. We are praying for Syviu and for Poland,
for Bogland and for Russia, for China and for Afri-
ca ; for the victories of France, and for the victorves
of the Faith; for those who suffer, who weep,who
hope ; for those who groan and who pray with us,
and also as well for those who do not pray, who do
not groan, who close their eyes, who forget !
' This day, Sabbath of the Passion, at this hour,
when the standard of the cross ia hoisted over al
our temples, at the sight of this holy emblem of de-
liverance and of safety, I say to myself, my God
| died upon the cress for el] mankind, and yet there
fare men who still are erucified. He died to deliver
jall from all bondage, and there are menâthe noise
which is now waking about this great question
painfully recalls to meâihere are millions of men
who are still inslavery! Good Friday is approach-
whereas the said Cominissioners, by their report, | minish its importance. After General de Goyon, | Roman Catholic Bishop in Charlottetown, iw Priuge jing. That day, the Catholie Church, standing at
| did declare that the said Township Lands were | the Pepe iumself could not have selected a more | Edward fsland, for tie parpose of enabling himapd | the foot of the eross, with eyes fixed on those ex-
| his successors to hold and acquire Real Extate in ltended arms which embrace the world, will com-
not liable to forfeiture in consequence of the non-| devoted partisan of his temporal power than M. de
performance of any of the condifions in the original | Montebello. Neither need it be pointed out that
grauts; and alse that vo arrears of the Quit Kents | this appointment, the most unpalatable that could
) are now due or recoverable from the Propricters; | be devised, as far as the Italian Court is concerned, |
| aud also that the Proprietors sheuld be quieted in| forms a singular result of tho mission of Prince
certain parts of the said land called Fistery Re- Napoleon.
serves.â Tlere we have a full, perfect and con- |
clusive kuewledge of what auiheority or powers |
were intended to be given by the Assembly and |
the Proprietors to the Commissioners, without the
east doubt whatever: just power and authority
enough to report anything in favour of the Pro-
prietory land claimants, and nothing at all in
| tuvour of the laborious and long suffering Tenaniry.
| Tshall conclude my present epistle by 2eking youâ
the down-trodden, the enslaved, the deceived, tiie
humbugged Tenantry of my adepted countryâwill
you vole at the next election for the present Pro- |
prietory faction, who have so abused the trust you |
}reposed in them at the last election! No, is|
answered for you, by
ABBERDUMBEER WILHTOCK.
ROME.
The recal of General Goyon from Rome is an
accomplished fact; and so Jar M. Lavalette has
succeeded in the object which hie lad in view in
leaving his Embassy and returning to France.
sut the Marquis wusiipped himself while eudea-
vouring to overthrow the General.
| back to Rome.
This has been brongut about by
Geyon should be recalled because of bis supposed
eyaipathy with the Supreme Poutitfin hi
the retmaoval of the Preach Ambassa:
himself notorious for his hostility to the LLoly See,
would alse becoine an absolute necessity. Whether
lor not the Fanperor encouraged the Aubassador
in his petulance at Rome, at all events he had no
alternative but to putan ead to tis diplomatic
career in the Eternal City when Goyouâs reeall
s traubles,
«Che: Examiner,
i
Senator for his services, and ibe ex-Ambassador!
isâthe Marquis de Lavalette. It is not,it seems, |
â _ a RNR Nn ee
<= LSS
Charlottetown, 16th June. 1562.
Rome, and the Count Montebdelio is at once Am-|
hassador of France to the Holy See aad Com |
NEWS BY THE ENGLISH MATI,, | mana.>i Chief of the French army in Rome
i In the meanune the Emperor appears mere s
a)
Tur R. M. Steamship â Africaâ arrived at Ha- hago than Âą as ye sug Hi geet he â â
the «@ rietba tat he peas Wei OY Dee Ulhurch,
f. } â poe > 2.) Lee COUVIC TG CEE Li 4 4 ye }
fax on the 11th inst. Latest Mnglish dates are | og that there iz no intention te deviate fro:n fhe!
to the 3ist ult. All the news of importance will | stetus quo.
be found in the following extracts from our latest | PORTUGAL.
papers. The King of Portugal is about to marry the
â
Ile goes not |
ihe firmness of the Pope, who caused If to be in- |
| mated to fhe Eanperor Napoleon that if General |
Whe made |
was determined upon; and now the General is a}
| this Island for religions parposes.
jnend to our Lord, in sublime prayer, Christians,
i
1. Be it therefore enacted by the Lieutenant Go-
vernor, Council and Assembiv
| the passing of this Act, the |
|
That from aml after lthese noble words: âLet us pray God the Father,
wht Reverned Peter | omuipotent, that He may cleanse the world from | softens even the lot of the poor slave, by softening
l heretics, Jews, Pagans: and we will utter with her
j dition whicn bas no
do ye sor them !' â1s it not at length ;
should lend our ears to that great »
Master, = Love ye one Farm al âall
ye be known as my disciples, if
other?â After eighteen centuries te tem
ec to slaves â tir a
we sh 60 ngain; apparently wij 3
the right to ooletee luasters of ey yt
move them to do justice. at lo
Since Jesus Christ, St. Paul and Apostles !:
down the principles of universal ym a laid
most illustrions preachers of the fil, the mate?
tinguished Bishops, the most : the
Poutifis have spoken in their order, J
thoroughly, you, who daily calumuiate the
that, it the Church rebukes the outburete of tices,
tious minds, human liberty is dear te it ; for liberty
in the scheme of God, who has not Treated man gs
imbecile slave, liberty is the source .
issucs every sovial Virtne ; the source of
greatness ; of all civilization; of ail ;
the Church, true mother of Loman rN the
Charch which has built np modern soc ;
tions, deplores all that injures er impedes htteas
of humanity, daughter of ted, and blesses all the
aids, improves and elevates ber, the spiri
of the Gospel ; and the spirit of the mc ee
the fascination of mterest which alone expining tine
coutinnation in Christian lands ef the Plague whic
I deplore, cannot prevent me from rewinding the
world of the pure and true inspiration of Chrictigy.
ity. We have the right also, we Priests, t0 tig np
You,
iF ee
z
our voices, to compkin of the ich j
this rae by forced a other Fagg
Priests of iny diocese, who offer te to fani-
lies formed by the Goprh whe widest of & well
reguiaied und free socia capitan ie which Chris.
tianity daily sents its benelite, you who uncess-
ingly ren:ind those who surround You of the sxcred
equality of duties, of rights, and of hope, inayine
the situation of the Catholic Missionary between
the masters and the slaves? ,
Suspected by the one class, or the
other, preaching to masters that justice whieh his
interest connternets ; snbmission, to those Whore
chains he should desire to break ; attempting toele-
vate the purposes, the dignity of beings wi
berty, abased in their own eyes, the preacher
fills a very sad mission. Ah! most traly, faith is
zood for ail; I pity those, whoever they be, whose
ife tends to its decline without this Hight; with
faith we can at mp to slaves, there is no con-
leaven for is end. iyi
Macintyre, and his successor and successors, being | all errors; may remove disease, keep off famine, | the heart of the master, but groans over a condition
}the Roman Catholic Bishop in Charlot
| said, in communion with the Charch of Rome, and
| being British born subjects, or daly naturalized,
lshalibe, and he ishereby declared to be a body |
name, and the said Pe:
sor and successors for t! 5
lof *âPae Roman Catholic Episcopal Corpdrition for
the diocese of Charlottetown,â shall, by the same |
|nume, bave perpetual succession, and a common
seal, and shail have power from time to time, by
and witlr the advice of his Vicur Genesal, or eftwo |
Clergymen, as hereinafter mentioned, to alter and
| renew, er change sach common seabeatt pler
Macintyre, and tis succes- i
iaud shall by the mame aforesaid, from time te tiwe, |
an Lat ail Limes herenfier, be able quad cap ote in
law, to have purchase, acqiure, posress, :
enjoy, for the luse and uses, eloemo
*
rf
asiicl, or educational, of the anid church of
in his diocese, or of the religieus community, |
i
peccie
| Rom
diocese, any Lands Tonements, or Dereditaments
wilhin the itsiand, aud tie same Real nite, | Cuuse, and to bey Your pra
or any part thereof, for the perpote aforesaid, from , vols
âimme to time, by
tetown wfure- | open the prison doors, and brenk the chain
| tivity.â
} Jesus Christ.â
en sof cap | which keeps the man ia a state of brutal abaeemeut.
; âThat isthe pure spirit of the Gospel and | We are ready to preach to the condemnedâtefollow
lof Jesus Christ; is it not thus that the Divine Ke- | them on to the scaffold, to live among galley slaves,
deemer of mankind annonnced His mission to the | ty evangelize the idiot, to dress the sorca of the
Corporate ia bis diocese aforesaid, ia deed and in| worki? âThe Spirit of the Lord is Lestowed on} wounded and the sick, we are ready to coosole the
Me,â said He, *âto teach the Gospel to the poor, to | slaves, we love them and they love us, but we ab-
wio are in bondage, liberty.â
. . i 1 om ie » 3 2 5 A 4
e time being, by the name | console those who weep,to cure the broken-hearied, | hor slavery. Ll regard with admiration the bishops
Ito preach deliverance to the captives, and to those |;
ind the es of countries where slavery exisix,
And, after the Di- becunse
ome , ait Adi-} 1 se t have confidence in them, in their re,
vine Marier, is it uot Si. Paul, one of Lis most fer | in their couscieutiousness, in their worth, in the ho.
veut disciple
s, whe shouted forth to the Pagan! nor of their sacerdotal character., They suffer be-
world the sublime oufery, â Their exist no longer} canse they know. as Ido, that onr religion is the
either masters or slaves, for we all are brothers in}
Well, even at this day, in Chris-/
n centuries of C
tian lands, after cighte:
' : '
, tere stil |
are SMLVOU.
your prayers,
. â : . i . .
; sason in which we uve, and alse of ews re- | prot it; they deserve to be indemiffed, and
and with the advice aud consent of } cently received froin distant conntries, where thâs | that is proposed to them, Those slaves, wien ther
religion of the free man.
Let us, therefore, be allowde to pray. Pray, sirs,
stianity. | pray carnestly, that a pacific solution of the Iawent-
those words of Jesus Christ, after thatery of | ablo problema of slavery may be devieed, mata
vul il ., | cousuumuated.
en, it is for this miserable and craelly-/ at once less advanced, and still more difficalt than is
ved portion of hn:uanity that Tcome to ask! seems. Those masters, th ey should be iderauilfied ;
Yes, let us pray; let oe pray tor | those shaves, they must beeivilized. Dacknowledge,
ior of any portion of the sume ct Zk Within his | Lose poor slaves. Andif Lfeel myself iiapetlied, }umony the masters (God save me froma blamiay thea
; : i at this hour, to commend to you this sud and holy | too much !) many act in good. faith; many wre bu-
al yers, ii is because of ie) mane; they have not made the eituetions they re-
Liu not ignorant thet this werk is
how
his Viear General, or of two Cleegymwea, ae afore-| grave quesiion issorety agitated snd towards which | shall be freed, their social organization will be a
of the said Corporation, for aly |
ing twenty-one yeurs, fro the day of the making
| intended to fill ap the two vacant French posts in} said, to let or demise by Indenture, under the seal | Lire
© gy
xeriod not exc
i theredf, provided that pon ay such Lense, the
reat eball be reserved, aud payabie to the suid Cor- | themen, pray.
poral ym, Veauriy, a id every 3
iin e of the suid Lease ; ax
ar during the con
,
saathmout af ocste and no
sun in gross, shall, under any pretence wirntso
, â~ :
ever, be taken forthe same, beyoud such yearly ltold the Note ist ; :
rent so reserved, as aforesaid, Otherwise the said | the South; that question, of com
Lease sail be utterly mall and yoid to all intents | «
and purposes whatseever ; and by the same name jt
teution of all Europe is direcied.
13,
is interrupted; blood dows in civil war.
*
Mot Fel
"nited States of America.
site liiile more of sya
|
ance, have had more influence
xf political predoi
han the question of slavery on the secesvion.out of | of Bord. a ix, assembled in council at La
are serious.
Tam! not plain, and is not easy of accoumlishiment, that
»ypathy than | we must pray that it mey be simplified and may be
Phe truth ) question, and slavery ixin nowise prepared forth;
t the old and the new continents are dis") but the priests of Christ Jesusâand all Christi
turbed; politicians harangue for and against; trade! inen of good hearts will ocerpy thensely
Ye. geu-jthat. Ina werd, l know the diffentties, â
li a great social crivis,in Which we | are exaggerated â we forget that interests, mutes
i ain indilcreat lookers-on, it is prayer wants, produce amor
! me that becomes ourgreat duty. Do not suppose, | agreement; but difficulties exist nevertheless, and
ve | sirs, that { may take part iu the lamentable quarrel |
'-â-hieh divides the âŹ
with
they
women relations, ties, needful
But it is exactly beeunse the work is
âal tariâle, or achieved.
My reverend brethren, the Bishops of the ince
ochelle
| Ă© * gee â . '
Princess Pia, daughter of King Victor Eummaanel, |
âew all in a row.â
â And your mother was a widow for the third
time.â
â Yes, bat mam didnât seem to mind it a tarval
sight. The next tellow she marricd was Jacob
Hayes, anâ the way mam does make him haze is
caution now I teil ve. If he does anythiag a leetle
out of the way, mam makes bim take a bucket
and white wash brusl: anâ go right up to te
buryinâ ground anâ white wash Uiree old phiuks,
jest to let him know what he may come to when
sheâs planted bim in the tame row, anâ got mar-
ried to the fifth husyand. So you eee my family
arn't a tarnal sight opposed to a dose of matri-!
mony.â
oe
A SHARPER'S OPERATION AT THE NATIONAL
TREASURY âUa Thureday afternoon, as a gentle
mao «ho had jast drawn some $1300 frow the
Treasury was leaving the building, some sharper,
who had been watching au oppertunity to make
a raise, overteok him, and told him that a mistake
had been made in counting the money, and asked
take it back to the cashier's room. Thinking
the sharper to be one of the employees of the De-
} and sister of the Princess Clothilde.
The King of Portugal has prohibited the Por-
tuguese Bishops trom going to Roine.
| hog pens, dirt in victuals, disputes in families, | GREAT BRITAIN.
\jyars with nations, water in the ocean, bad men | The distress in Lancashire amongst the factory
int America, or base women in France! No,Jordau | operatives is daily ingreasing, and the machinery |
Cla:ke, you may hope, you may congratulaie, you | pitherte in operation for mecting it is evidently | RUSSIA.
tay reason, you nay sheerâbut that cannot be.) preaking down. Every week, every month will, }
Phe thrones of the Old World, the Court of the | there is every reason to fear, add to the intensity |
} Universe, the governments of the world, may al! | of this distress, and the leading meu in Manchester
full end crumble inte ruin, the New World may „haye not met an hour too svon to consider the bes
commit the natioval suicide of dissolving this! moans of grappling with a difliculiy that cannot
Unionâbut all this unust occur before I joia the) pe shirked. This meeti iz, convened in the May-|
demecracy. lorâs parlour, on Thursday, disclosed a variety of
I joia the Democracy! Jordan Clarke, you) eyuficting views as to tie best mode of arresting |
know not what you say. When I join the dewo-) the calamity whici
cracy, the Pope of Rome will join the Methodist) patiy
âhurech. When Jordan Clarke of Arkansas is! 4 .
| President of the Republic of Great Britam, by! Âą in in favor of raising a fund from whieh to re-| iug in favor in the eves of the Cilaese.
âuniversal sefirage of a couteuted peopleâwihien | fieye by way of loan the necessities of the starving ; At Shanghai, on the 22nd March, 300 marines
Queen Victoria consents to be diverced from | men, women, and children. Vat the loan system, | @ sural arms men from H. M.S. Lew nde
Urince Albert by a county courtio Kansasâwhen | iy entire cash, doos net appear to have met wit), Went eut and drove off @ large body of rebels. |
Congress obliges by law James Buchanan to marry) yyych taver at the hands of the meeting. The | OM tie 24th Mareâ they madea similar excursion, |
a European Princessâwhen the Pope leases the eivie funetionary seemed vo think that the dis. YZ! even greater success; tor a plundering party |
Capitol at Washington for his City residenceâ) tress ought to be met promptly by the masters | {ll im their way, ladea with spoil. They dispersed |
jwhen Alexander ef Russia, and Napoleon of) why have made large fortunes by the exertions of |e patty and destveyed the loot. On this cea. |
Mrance, are elected Seuators ir Congress {roi | sy. gaetory bands, and he io oppusdd ta the appeare | sich one nuwine aud oe seaman were wounded. |
New Mexicoâwienu good men cease to go to âsensation articlesâ the London ail | On the 25th March the same force trem the In- |
from St. Petersburg.
t| his ambitious brother Constautine Viceroy of Po-|
laud,
The Czar has appointed |
When the revolution of 1830 broke out in |
Warsaw,another Constaative ruled there as Vice-
gerent. |
CHINA. |
Nankin is surrounded by the Imperialists,
Foreigners are allowed to visit Pekin under the |
passport system. âThe foreign alliances are grow- |
y 1 has overtaken the faetory ope- |
esin thiscountry. The Mayor of Manchester, |
jvited and plulantrophie gentleman, appears
ance vi i
ample, and beneficial a manner as any other
| A most important piece of news has reached us | COMPorte,
| answer or be answered unto, in any mauner what- |
| sig
| respectively, the said Roman Catholie Bishop and | which civil war has issued. Iam assured that the | in 1503, wick the new Bishops of the colonies, three
| bis saceessor and suecessors Bhall and may be able | Abolition party has rendered iteelf vdious by its ex- | years after the emancipation of the shaves in
jand capable in law to sue and be sned, im) pewd and | travagances ; while the slave-owuers often are mea | French possessions, sae say this solemm decla-
be iuplealted, answer and.Le answered inal! Courts | of geod faith and of good hearts. 1 am told of more | ration, ap roved by the Holy See:
| of law and equity and places Whatsvever, in as huge, | Catholics at the South than at the North; and of| â The Catholic Church has ever deplored theervel
» body | citizens enlisted in both armies, animated by equal | slavery in which a multitude of men are
or as any otherperson may or cau in law | patriotism, who, on cither side, sincerely believe | to the great detriment of their souls, and has never
: ; ceased to labor to remedy so great a calamity.â
I place under the protection of there noble words,
or equity sue or be sued, implead er be impleaded, | they are acting justly. : j
i It is said, it tne Uniou be reconstructed the eman- |
| soever; provided always that the lanfls, tenements | cipation of the slaves is not certain, and if the sepa-| and of so many other Apostolic utterances, the ar-
nnd premises so to be holden by the suid corporation ration become complete, that emancipation is not) dent vow which [offer
at this ervel slavery was
i siall net atany time exceed the annual value of |impossible. It is wished to persuade me that the | cease at length throughout all Christian countries.
four hundred pounds inany one Parisa in this Is- j interests of our mannfacturers are with the South,! Alas! sira, I know it, slaves ure not the only
lund; and further provided that the remtsand protits | of our Coumnerce with the North ; that we ought to) pressed an.ong men. There are countries, even
} arising from any such lands and prewises shall be | desive the upholding and the union of a people} Europe, there is an Iveland, a Poland, there ina
applied for the uses and purposes of the Charch or |W hom we aided to set free, and which serves to) Syria, w here op yression tukes a different form with-
Churches within the Parish where such lands are | counterpoise other nations, or, on the other side, } ont being a smaller evil. My com for one
situate, and not clsewere. _ we â pone the agyrandizement of a ponte anne not ee compete for others. = slo mvt
_ ae ali dias i ad _| whose example and encroaching spirit Inenaces the understand those men who resign themselveste at
ithe, eg ae ute ny ety Pr dt one jworld. I don't know all that. Eat what I do) evil from the embarrassment of choosing between
am the Bild Miocesg of ae sald Roman Catone | 1. is, that there are still foar millions of slaves | the different reasons for iddiguation. No, do not
Bishop, in whom = 9 tle endaneny or r= oe lin the United States, two miilious in the rest of | let us take one mischief asthe excase. for angther
Jand, eormenty ay wlegtoct stomata, situates YINK, | A nerica, tovether six millionsof slaves in Christian mischief. Let us labor to destroy the one, then af-
and being hater the eae island, rysipe , or suall, | corntries cizhteen hundred years after the Cruci-}| terward the other. Ferme, I will never yield
- Lamy be ea cate ea a ares, i. Lerwine for fixion; what I do know is, thut the horrors of civil | auything that is evil in fuct; I deplore all, and
om benelit of the a Catholic nuren, 1 | or have been let loose by this fearfal question,| would I had power to remedy all; aod if inv life
the suid Dioceses, from time to time, to convey, as- and that the peace of the world is threatencd, and | be long eno , With God's prace , Twill crate
eu, or transier by deed under bis hand and seal, lis already disturbed. And what Tam more happy | it wholly to contributing my feeble efioris and daber
or their hands and seals, in the usual lezal way,all iy knowâ is, that, by a recent and important actâa/to canse the disappearance, one by ope, of the
yartment, be handed over the package containing | heaven and bad meu to bellâwhen this world is
he money, and leisurely walked back to the money
suom, Where, after waiting tor some time, he found
turned upside downâwhen proof is atlord.d, both |
}clear and unquestionabie, that there is no Ged â
. ee . . â arn > reyjsife le wet teow . os ure |
| other papers te stimulate generosiiy ia districts | PCâąCUFe Ts visited the town they had capiured on}
ithe 2ist February; the rebels had returned to it, |
far renoved from the cotton trade. " ; |
thirteen days aiter they were driven out. On)
Wilmer & Sinith, in its review of the week,
that the sharper was an impostor, and instead of | when men turn to auts, and ants to elephants â 1 |
paving entered the room he had made his way | will change my political faith, aud come out on
through the regr of the building, and escaped with , the side of democracy !
Says a ad
Sinee our last review monetary and commercial
his prize. | Suppoisng that this full and frank letter will en-| transactions lave undergone no material change.
AR Ws ag NTI able you to Six upon tae period wheu I wili come | Cet on is rather dearer, and the last news from
Diwexajoxs oy tux Narioxat Carsroy.â âout a full growa democrat, and to communicate | America is likely to keep up the price, but the
Tue ébtiinendel the Capitol at Washington the game ty all whem if may concern i Arkausas, general business of the country remutins much the
ure thus officially stated: Whole length gf I haye the bonor to be, &e., oak tam a thea noted. The demand for accommo-
> th oe i i Phe W. G. BrowsxLow. | datien in the disconat market and at the Bank
jocleaitl veelâ tae coats iachâ of „ ay has erent in sg ons lene good bills
: . J2E feet: „ é RL ere Te ee ee r Eni lare taken a shade yuder the Bank mininum. In
142 feet 8 inches; width of old Capitel, 252 GIRRESPOND THRE | the Steck Exchange, the supply being abundant
feet 4 inches, height of dome abyve the base- | » 4 âthe rate for loans troin day today ou Government
ment flour. 264 feet; acres of ground actully | salad daveatelsieitn!-the â1 PSATIPE Ty,) Securities is only 14 per cent, The Bank return!
te covered, 153,112 agupre fect, gr more than SE onker Piauiae oe bow den shows that the increase in the secyritics is more |
<0 anil & hall oa Myloâ 9 , than counterbalanced by the inerease in the depo-
. the half LAN}, GREETING: | sits,and the reserye has, consequently, potent |
} The number of children bora out of wedlock Friends cx:d Fellow Sufferers, under a bad Land) some addition. The decline in the cvin and bul-|
in England during the year 1560 was 43,693, being | Tenure end worse Gocerament ; lion is of no importance.
64 per eent, of the whole number of children) Now that the last Sesyion of the worst Legisla- ° }
rg In Cumberland, where the proportion rose: ture with which a British Colony was ever afflicted | ted abroad with less disturbance of the mouey |
eveds of the recent foreign loans are bemg remi +)
x to ite merimen, it was double that amount; in| has passed over, I feel imperatively called on to market tian might have been apprehended, Tie |
j
ij
Mortulk it was 1@7; im Westmorloud, 106; in! address you on a subject upon which depends your | #uoeuat of Australian gold uown to be on the way |
Shropshire, 96; in Nottinghamshire, Os. Itwas | future freedom or slavery, according to the action | to this country is now reduced to ÂŁ347,500 |
also high im Bedfordshire, Suffolk, Herdforshire, | which you will take thereon. Many of you, Lhave| Cotton at sea: There is no Atmerican Cotton |
Lincolusbire, and the Nerth Riding of Yorkshire. | reasou te know, had wisdou) and discretion enough known to be at sea tor this port. The amount ou
The Registrar-General thinks that the proportion | to believe that you had potbing to expect from the | the water this time last year, was about 107 ,0U0 |
af illegitimate children born in Londouâ4-2 per | present thing calling itselt a Government, more) bales, âThe quantity of East fudian at sea, to ar-|
vent. in the is very probably understated. | than @ mock sympathy, the better tg deceive you, | rive by the end of August, is aboyt 172,000 bales, |
â There ix mueh greater facility for the suppression | while they would be arming the relentless, tyran-) against 230,000 bales same time last year,
of facts in large cities than iu simalior towns and nical Landlords with such durther powers as would |
villages.â : complete yoor ruin; but perhaps uene of you could
the 27th March a recoaneitering party proceeded |
towards Wong-ka-dza, about twelve iniles west |
from Shanghai. They found here that the rebels |
were in force and strongly entrenched. On the
3rd April a force left Shanghai and proceeded to |
Wong-ka-dza; they slept under arms during the
night ef the Srd, and on the morning of the 4th!
advanced and tok the place. Ta the fight Adaui-|
ral Hope and Dr. Escott were wounded. The |
Admiralâs wewid will coufine him on board for)
six or more weeks. His conduct in exposing hime |
self so muck is not according to military rule. |
Troops have been ordered from Tien-tsin to Shang: |
hai; it seems as if more fighting were in contenis |
plation. From Pekin we have news stating that!
the Imperial energies are beirg awakened, and |
that the foreign alliance is growing in approval |
day by day. Hereafter foreigners will be allow-
instead of, as heretofore, iu the capacity of guests |
of the Legation. |
a
THE BILL TO TNCORPORATE THE R..
CATHOLIC BISHOP.
A FEW weeks ago, the Colonial Secretary as-
° |
summed the novel and extraordinary character of |
Defender of the Catholics against the eneroach-| any ot
or any of the ruid lands, tenements, and hevredita-
ments unto the Roman Catholic Bishop for tire time |
being of the suid Diotese, by his corporate name,
aforesaid, to be bolden by the said Bishop and his
suecessor aid suecessors, in his said corporate name
aforesaid, for the purpose aforesaid, us provided by
this Act.
II. It shall not be lawful fer the said Bishop, or
his snecessor or successors for the time being, to
make or execute any indenture of lease as afore-
suid, of the hinds, teuemcats and hereditaments ac-
quired or held, or to be bereafier acquired or heid
by him ander and by virtne of this Act, withoutthe
con.ent in writing of his Viear-General; or in case
the said VicarGeneral shall be incapacitated by
sickness, infirmity, or any other cause, or shall
happen to be necessarily absent at the time, then
of two other Clergymen to be selected or named by
the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese; such
selection or nomination, and such consent to appear
upou the face of the indenture or lease intended to
be executed by the parties, aud to be testilied by
the said Bishop and ate tl or two Clergy-
wen us aforesaid, being made parties to and signing
Qa the whole, the pro-| ed to visit the capital under the passport system, | and sealing the said indenture of lease in the pre-
seuce of two credible witnesses, as consenting par-
ties thereto respectively.
IV. Nothing in this Act contained shal] extend
or be construed to extend in any uanner to confer
any y swipes or ecclesiastical rights whatsoever
upon the said Roman Catholic Bishop hereinbefore
mentioned, or upon his successor or successors, or
| other ecclesiastical person of the said Charch, in
communion with the Church of Rowe aforesaid.
V. In ease the said Roman Catholic Bishop or his
successor or succeasors, shall from sickness, iuirmity
her cause, be incapable of or be incapaci-
The Defence Committes of the House of Com-| ments of their own venerated Bishop; and he | tated from performing his or their duties in bis
message of the 8th Mareh, sent to Congress. by the | plagnes which afflict the human race. If Teould
| President of the United States, and geopten by ajact L would act. If L could speak I would speak.
| xrent biajorilyâmeasures prudent, equitable,peace- | If I can only pray â at least 1 will offer wp my
iful, have been proposed to put an end. to slavery, | prayer to God. Here, girs, you have the reason of
jand passed. Compensation is pro to all the
|my asking you to pray, especially for those in sla-
; States which agree to undertake in their territory | very. In these tonching universal prayers, whieh
jthe gradual abolition of slavery. No one can tell! you recite each day in the evening exercise, and in
; What will be the consequence of this proposition,
| becutuse it depond on the response of the Suites.
No one is under compulsion ; a limit is assigned to
ithe evil, and a veut is opened for it. For the first
{time in sixty years the central gavermment takes
jpart and commits the whole nation to a vigorous
effort against the evil. Wiihout being solved, the
question is then seriously under consideration, the
| step bus been made, a hope is opened. That makes
another motive for me, and an inexpressible need
to pray God that He may deizn to bless an enter-
prise the pacific solution of which must be ardently
desired.
i understand the objeciions of those who plead
for slavery; 1 do not desire to discuss them at
length. Net that they do not tell me that the slaves
are happy, and, besides, that established facts be-
come lawful through duration of time. | Slaves are
happy. Yes, perhaps, under good masters ; they
eut, they sleep, have some honrs of repose, perlaps
even inay be dissipated at pleasure ; but have they
the domestic hearth âbave they the familyâhave
they freedom? Poor disinterested ones of the hu-
man family, they have lost not only the right of
primogeniture, but all rights, and because they are
sometines allowed a plate of lentils, proclamation
is mude that they are heppy! As for the doctrine
of established facts, L have too often attacked it, in
its applications to the temperalities of the Church,
to accept its extension to its spiritual domain,which
it wost cherishes. Immortal souls! Ah! the Charch
Knows the price of souls; and if she has sometimes
| which the Churchâ commends to God the traveller,
the sick, the agonized, the affected of every kind,
after the afflicted, commend im_your bearts the
slaves. I ask it of you, sirsâI ask it of all my dio-
cesans. The moment seems propitions.
te aceomplish the work begun, und if your prayers
are not heard to-day repeat them to-morrow, until
| at lenst they be necepted of Him whon: we do not
vainly call the most wercifulâthe God ou high.
Accept, cherished co-laborers, the fresh aseur
ance of my deep and allectionate devotion to you in
the Lord
t Ferix, Bishop of Orleans.
Orvrass, Sanday of Passion Week,
April 6th, 1862.
= gp
IN our next paper we shail finish the debates |
| of the House of Assembly. The debates for the
Session of 1261 were not wholly pubihed until
| the 23d Septembe> of that yearâso that we stall
have completed the work three months avener that
we did similar work last year, while there ha
ibeen very little difference as to the extent of it
\in the two years. One of our objects in thi
hastening the publication of the debates wast
âput our readers in possession of the infermatios
â_ââ â9 060 @ -â- â
| Diocese, then his Viear-General, or the person ad- they contain as early as possible this smamer,
Lance Tarx âIt is not probable that with
@n army ot five hondred thousand of the best
soldiers in the world, with a nayy that can
md defiance even to thet of England, with in-
ex'austible resources, and with a national
ere dit standing higher to-day than that of any
3 evuutry in Evrope, that we will quietly sub-
by mit to the repetition of the indignities we
have reevived at the binds of England during
the dark bours of our national tguuble.â
Detroit Advertiser.
; ~~ âp 002 ae
A New Use ror Coat Ouw.âCoal Oil is said
te be a gure destroyer of bed-bugs. Apply plentiy
fully with a sma)l brush or feather, to the places
where they most do epngregate, The cure is et-
feetual and permanent. Gilt frames, chandediers,
&e., rubbed slightly over with coal oil, will not be
\ disturbed by fies,
Tax ow Baceioas.âA petition numeronsly
signed 4 spinsters of â aneertain agesâ âbetweer
es and 60 â resident in ~euodnte shele ri has
aentrusted, appropriately, to a jolly young
bacielow omar with iat locality, aa
a graduated tax upon vache ors beiween Zo aud
50, to commeyes irom Valeatineâs Day, 185:
shvuld form part of the financial scheme of
preseut â hed ee ot this tax many
years in the eld _conptry, at last, to our inti-
atter on 5â
~Quebee O'd T name in the fax paper
that, richer masters, the Proprietors. After spending |
proved them to deserve. It is therefore betterâ
even at such a stupendous cost to the farmers of |
the Islandâthat they have had an opportunity of
Proprietors, as weil a8 Gir extracagance m plung-'
the â right menâ for you to trast any longer with
the power to injure you or keep you in bondage.
You saw during the last Session enacted tie
greatest political humbyg, the most consummate
| piece of â hugkam,â the most daring act of hypo-
\erisy, ever before attenpted to be palmed, or
| Palmered, on a rational or civilized community
where British laws or freedom were thought to
prevail â that monstrous tissue of absurdity aud
deception, enlled âTHE AWaky,â or * Report of
theâ Land Commissieners!â Never were the
words of holy writ more literally fulfilled, â that
a servant cannot serve two masters.â The Elec-
tors, the great majority of whom are yourselvesâ
the âTenantryâought te he the masters of those
calling themselves your Representatives, having
by your suffrages at the last genera] election raised
them to a position which has enabled them to
betray you, in order to serve themselves and their
weeks 1 the mockery of legislating or passing Acts
squandering the reveque, plunging the Colony sti
dveper in debt, under the sparions pretext of serv-
ing the Tenantry, the a swindie is at once un:
nracked by the Duke of Neweastleâs despateh
Sir Samuel Cunardâs Prorgirtousâ
i ae
have formed so bad an opinion of our present rulers | so toned ge vt ee yal sa laboured, through several articles, to make it ap-
i vretehedly lare Thons ate) 3's ; a
as their wretehedly disreputable âaeticus have | original scheme, ;
|
ing the Colony so deeply in debt, tat they ; , for War made an indefinite re aly to the effect â P :
ing ây ceply Z «(Pegs that the subjeet had been under Ce dideration, but | man believed the vile calgumny; aud we did not |
America.
said that he had uo objection to produce a return
of the iron-cased vessels built and building by the
culty in laying betore the House from French ot-
ficial documents the number of jron-cased vessels |
built and building for Franee. The naval com-|
missiouer of this country in France had every fa-)
cility for visiting the Preneh) dockyards, but he
Was net awure that any special official document
bad been furnished to lum,
get said, in reterence to the quality of jren sup-
plied to the Navy, natice had been give of closing
relative te the Award of the Land Commussion-| #!! contracts for iren, and after consultation with
the|ers,â the arbitraijon clause, &e., &e., recklessly | Cettain seieutifie geutlemen, tenders for a
i supply cf iron wouid be issued, which iron would |
be subjeeted to a special test.
and} have been a blunder ov the part of d Ele for him; and the Jast part of th Bl
who, taking eeriously a joke with 7 ans Righe, a the first section very
pear that there was an sbominable attempt made |
Iu the Commons a question yas asked by Mr by certain Catholic members of the House of As-|
4 , t > : wil. | . .
wird, whether the Horsfali moyster gan Fala | sembly, with the knowledge and concurrence of
the Warrior and other targets, No intelligent
The Syerstary) the whele Catholic population.
think it worth our while to write mneh upon the
echelons eee pace the Netaare | subject at the time the Colonial Secretary made |
â a an ND OU Fepakions W221 the | himself so ridiculous by pretending to be a friend
ee oe eerie of the Catholics. The Bil to incorporate the Bis-
hop having, however, appeared jn the â Royal
Gazetteâ of Wednesday last, we have great pleas
sire in transterring it to our columns. Any one
who can read will see at a glance that it delegates
no power te the Bishop that can be in the slightest
| degree detrimental to the civil interests of his
flock; but, oa the contrary, secures the Church
against serious casualties that might occur in the |
| event of the Bishop dying without making a will, |
In answer to Lord R. Grosvenor, Lord C, Pa-) because he liolds lands under the will of his pre-
decessor, which might be claimed by his own kin-
dred, if, by sowie dispensation of Divine Previ-
new dence, he were deprived of the power or opporta-|
nity of making a will, The Bill to give a corpo-
The Parliamentary rifle enntest turve ont to rate trust to his Lordship virtually makes a will
nothing had been determined on,
In answer to Mr. Lindsay, Lord Palmerston
British Gevernment, arid there would be no diffi-
which the Speaker! clearly stetes â that the rents and profits arising
| ministering the Diocese, shall have the same pow-
ers us are by this Act conterred upou the Roman
Catholic Bishop of the suid Diocese.
Vi. Nothing herein contained shall affect or be
! | , constracd to atiect, ia any manner or way, tie
convincing gil of you, by their partiality to the, „2„¹ 40 opportunity of testing its power against his Lordship, to encroach upon the civil rights of "iz! ts of Her Majesty, Her Ieirs or Successors, or
of aly person or persons whomseever, or of any
body politic or corporate, or of any Church War-
dens, or auditors of accounts in any Reman Catholic
Chureh in this Island, or jy auy Way to abridge,
diminish or take away any of the rigiits, privileges
aud advantages now enjoyed and possessed by any
pewholder, or any person having any right, title or
mterest In any pew or sittingin any Rowan Cytho-
lic Church in this Island, such only excepted as are
hereinbefore mentioned and provided for.
Vil. This act shall not come in force or be jn
operation wutil Her Majesty's Royal approbation be
thereunto had and declared.
oe ial eo 5
We invite the attention of our readers te the
following Pastorzl Letter of the Bishop of Orleans,
France, on the great question of slavery which
how occupies so promment a place in the melan-
holy and disastrous war between the Northern |
and Southern States. The Leiter is a splendid
plea for universal liberty; and pays a high tribute
to Mr. Lincoluâs Cabinet for the progressive ten-
dencies manifested by it, in proposing, as it lately
did, to abolish slavery, and pledging the national
treasury to indemnify those planters who may be
induced to give up the institution. Orange bigots
take great pleasure in representing the Catholic
made sacrifice of part of her rights, even the most
incontestible, whea the higuer interest of her mis-
sion lins not made it her duty to maintain them, it
has been to reserve the right of suyiag to all the
| World, with all the ardor ef her love, * Your souls,
give me your souls aud keep the rest.â Da mibi
anhnas, Catera tolli tibi. Nor let me be asked either
to discuss the theoretic questions of slaveryâlet
me vot be reminded thatall sacient social conditions | of the House of Assembly â owing to the
have resied upon thatâdo not seek to dgmonstrate oe ies n : House
wo me, by force of hypothesis that can never be ve. | M@80ner in which we were treated by the
slized, that slavery is not pylawtnl in jtself, eon- | with regard to courpensationâouly that we cob-
sidered In a certain way, under certain conditions. | _- : :
I let alone abstract theories, and 1 look ut the tucis, sidered it very desirable to have the country the
L look at the number of times those conditions have roughly informed on political affairs previous to
an election, feeling well assured that the most
us to be prepared for a general eleetion, should
it take place this year, as the information W
be very useful before but not after such a proceeding.
Indeed, we should not have given up s0 inueb
our space (about 120 columns) to the proceedings
any way, one single sentence that cane from
demned by slavery to remediless abasonimnt. J do
F observed the utinost impartiality in the publication
Redewmpijon.
it is sv conye-
hands of the Reporters.
not an opinion, but a dogimaâlet it be well under-
been met in history, and why, humanity being con-
stituted such as it js, they might occur. 1 look not
at the exceptional case, but ut the state, the foun-| tensive and speedy publicity of the debates
dation even, of life and of huwan dignity, con- promote the interests of the Liberal party and of
mo age oo mpeolt pone = Te we ractions and hypo-| the country generally, and be very damaging
Hesis. Certainty, f would have much to say upon love Te desi that bave
the origin of this obstinate and protracted wolteean) the Goversenenty.«: âWe > Geely â
plage spot. ha did man reduce man to slavery ?
defy its explanation to me unless by original sin. | of se debat: might have sup
How did the slave again beeome the equal of 7 hs these dubai, apihengh we ve have
miasicr ? A doy ine explanation unless through the | ptessed any part of them we liked. pte in
Slavery is so that its begin- | pejthe itten 2% energree altered
ning caynet be lavery i iy x neither omitted nor exaggerated, ner
nient, that its ending cannot be comprehended.
If [ touched upon the theory, I would show that
the untiy of the human family, which, with us, is
: Se icon
stood, a dogma, and even one of the grounds of our WE are indebted to the politeness of we date
faith â_ one ulso a dogina of scicaceâI would | in this City for a file of papers, of the latest
show that the unity of the human family, the prin- : âane hich we observe
ciple of digniiy, of eqaality, of freedom, of A sien from South Australia, in one of w âa
nity among mankind, condeams and rebukes|an interesting account of the reception of His
slavery ; and I would refer to the works of Blu-
menbach and of Tiedemann, of Humboldt and of Exeelleney Sir D, Daly, at 4 * No.
âwe wil edeavouy (0 make room in our next
Geoffrey &. Hilaire; I would cyli upon my learned