,——-._ v.-.- — an: mam sable body in possession of the matter, have caused ‘ to be printed"certain documents, showing the rincipal facts of the case; but if any ‘prt which‘to those in this Island may seem fully proved; ll to your honourable body appear doubtful, we pray that you will not, on account of _ such defect, reject olir Petition, but will give opportunity to supply what triage judged wantin . _ . And as the presentatives o the people of Prince Edward Island, We do most respectfully, and yet with all I earnestness, beseech and implore the Honourable the House of Commons,so to order the matters sufitted, that the [topple may cultivate the wilderness with a prospect of retaining it—that the soil of this Island—situated under Mine us climate'as that of Nova Scotia and New answic and which during more than five months in the year, iscovcred with snow, and during that same period is, by an icy barrier around the shores, precluded fiom any W of tillage or of export or import—ma _no _longer so managed as that those who bring into c tivation the wildernesg be under -perpetual bondage to tho"? who use a te (unadvisedly grained to them, under conditions which, they have neVer fulfilledtand all lialilocts forfeiture,) solely for their own pecuniary end 9°11u ' ment. _ . as in duty bound, yonr Petitioners shall ever pray. motion' ' WWIIMWHMWGM' Mr. Palmtifmnsioved, in amendment thereto, that it be “ h' do three months. ‘ Wagons: on the motion of amendment: ens—Messrs. Palmghltiifidson, goose. Beck, Messrs. Ra l acnei , on omery, _ a Dalziel, Gal-man, Fraser, D. Macifonald, Macin- tosh, Forbes,Macfarlane, Le Lacheur, 14. So it in the no live. '1‘“ ’motion, thatEIhe report be agreed to, was then Pl ' r ARRIVAL or Tim srnannas. v ' Haunx, barbs. TbeSteatnshi Wis-i516, Capt. Judkins, arriv re on Monty morning, h 41 hours f in Boston, havin on 53 tigers, one ofme Capt. Millel'pf Acadia, left behind at that port, in consequence of sickness, when his ship sailed. The pa rs by her contain no newa of im- . ce. She sailed for England the mine night about 9 o‘clock. Yesterday morning, the Britannia, Capt. Cleland, arrived from Liverpool in 14 days, with58 passengers for this city, and 32 for Boston. From papers by her we learn that hostilities with the Chinese, alter bein resumed, had once more been concluded 0r suspended. h'e Passion? hadnot arrived at Liverpool up to the period of the Bntan- nia’s sailin . A Dublin pa r mentions the receipt, in that city, of a otter from Que directed to sent by her, hearing the Hours mark, of the lOth April, and the New York stamp of 8th March, three days rewons t’o her ailing. As Havre, however, is within less t an a day's sail of the British coast, from 'which Steamvessels ply daily to that port, we fear the hopes which the Duhlm parsgra h_are calculated to excite, rest upon a very slender foun tion. The Unicorn, steamer, roceeded with the mails and nearly 60 passengers for Quebec, at half-past 9 o'clock the same morning, and about one, the Britannia got under weigh for Boston. Addresses to the Captains o the Steamships of this‘ line, have of late become so much a platter of course that we have forborne to notice them; but it appears that a more substantial token of esteem, from the passengers on board the Britannia, in February last, in the form of a piece of plate, awaits Capt. Cleland, on his arrival at Boston. Pants, April 5 —It seems certain that M. Guizot has «flared the mediation of France to terminate the .dlf- feronces existing between Great Britain and the United States. _ A The French are digging away. at their fortifications ' ' re and ener M ‘ sailed for Africa. The Peers are dis- cussing soaie motions‘ef political economy. In Spain the Senate ofthepofies sre not yet in full session. In Belgium, the people are working hard, and Leopold is changing, or about to change Ministers. lu Austria, they sre_pressing matters with the Pope about religion. In Prussia they are drilling soldiers and school teaching all they can. Ton.an AND Berra—The Turkish Government had ‘ ordered hack to Constantinople the Albanian troops which formed part of the Syrian expedition, it being the intention of the Porte to punish, in a severe manner, the perpetrators of the outrages recently committed near Beyrout. The excesses of these troops had excited astrong feeling in Syria against the present order of things. i The advices from Alexandria represent Mehemet Ali as resuming his military preparations, as if still'detcr- mined to resist, in the event of the original terms of his compact with the Porte not being agreed to.~—-Afier deso patching his remonstrance to the Sultan, he left Alex- andria to visit his son Ibrahim. Rumours of the death of the latter personage had reached Alexandria, but prove to be unfounded. Tun East—We have advices from Constantinople ofthe l7th all. The Ottoman fleet returned to that capital on the 16th, and had resumed its former station along the European bank of the Bosphorus. LONDON, Artur. 17. Lord Cardigan has stepped forward to seize another oppprtunily of claiming his usual place before the pu . He has, it is said, chosen Easter Sunday as the dsyon which to inflict a flogging upon a private soldier, and he has, moreover, chosen the building in which divine service had just been performed, as the fit scene of the dreadful military unishment. Sir Howard Douglas, the rd High Commissioner, opened the Parliament of the Ionian Islands, on the 18th ult. with speeches to the Senate and Legislative Assembly, as usual. For the first time since l830, the soldiers of the gar- rison of Paris were brought to church, to be present at the religious service on Good Friday. _ The penny postage system, slightly modified, is likely to he introduced into Belgium. Five vessels loll Calais last week for the cod fishery at Newfoundland. The number which lell Dunkirk for the same destination is sixty-four, amounting altoge- ther to 4,783. Their crews amount to 910 men. Upwards of 51.000 signatures have been obtained to the Manchester Petition, for the repeal of the corn and revision laws. . On Tuesday, a vast number of English, including many oficers of the garrison at Dover, crossed to St. Omer to be present at a grand fete given by the Duke of Orleans. The Camp of St. Omer consisted of 10,000 l inert. The London letters and newspapers are now brought to Newcastle, in the short space of sixteen hours and a 7 half after leaving the Euston square station. In a garden, which is parish property, at Pebmarsh, aglazcd pot was dug up a few days ago. containing269 silver coins of Philip and Mary, Elizabeth, James, Charles, Cromwell, are... weighing in all four pounds seven ounces. . , _ The Easter \Bqnquct at the Mansion House—The annual entertainment at the Mansion House was given. according to immemorial usage, on Monday, and that groaning of weight of plate, E at the Egy the tablespunder the ies,rwhich is and the profusion of luxur a Simple I figure ofspeech elsewhere, befiame, as usual, d It ral fact at the Mansion ouse. “Phi;ps, the first person inoculated by Dr. Jenneseifz: the cowpoclt, is still living, and is employed as gar by the doctor's descendants- RIO-OANIZATION or 1152 can?" cation is about being hel in n on._ delegates was to take place on the 20th ult. :fld'lfnz convention is to be opened on the 12th of Apfl - we convention will consist of fifteep meriLbers, fiyecgom t H n districts, and ten rom t e provyn . meblfwaiiinzot, as minister of Foreign affairs, has sent l0,000f. for the relief of the Maronite families who "9 victims of the late events in Syria. _ ‘ Emigration qf tile Swim—The Siviss journals state, that a great number of the inhabitants of Cliatnllllz. although in the enjoyment of a cert-i: dle'greegf lo} are dis in of their property wit t in II emigratiii: with their families, some to New York, others to Louisiana, where many of their fellow-countrymen have made successst settlements. _ The Syrian news is from Smyrna and Beyrout ol the lBih ult. On several points of the coast the.plsgue was re in . , The mountains were tranquil. . . lThis letters from Alexandria are of the .27tli ult. There was nothing of English interest passing in Egypt. The despatches from Trehisond, via Malta, show that the dilferences beth the Prussian and the English Courts are happily adjusted. Scornann.—-We have ha si—Anothcf. 000' The election of d capital April weather, for some days (observes the Glasgow Courier), a little _ram occasionally, but more sunshine. Sowing briskly on in our neighbourhood. The wheat brairds look fresh. h lth d romisiii . ea y all p g April 19. Sir George Arthur has arrived in town from Uppef Canada. Sir George transacted business on Saturday at the Colonial Ollice. . ‘ On the l7th of February, the Emperor of Brazil, with the Princesses. his sisters, and all his ministers, paid} visit to her Majesty’s ship Curacoa, Captain Jenkln Jones, senior officer at Rio. His Majesty was received with all the honours due to his rank. the yards being manned. and royal salutes fired from the ships, when-he first embarked in his state barge, and on his reaching and quitting the Curacoa. After leavingthe Curacoa, the Emperor-went on board the senior French and American Ofiicers’ ships, the Alemene and Potomac, remaining about a quarter of an hour on board each, and then landed. ‘ The depression in trade is now so great that there are no fewer than three thousand empty dwellings in the borough of Stockport. All the mills are now work- ing only eight hours per day. I There is now living in extreme penury in Great Peter- street, Westminster, a nephew of t_he celebrated Oliver Goldsmith. He is in his 73d year, and is named Joseph Goldsmith. The County of Tipperary is represented to state bordering on actual insurrection. MISEIAILI Dss'ri'rurioiv or THE SPANISH Team“. —The budget for the present year, just prew by the or! interim minister of finance, exhibits a defippncy ,eina one- Ir 0 t esuin assigne to erdluglit’et'. ‘ Cousrammorne, March 24.-sThe Constantinople correspondent of the Augsburg Gazette, under the date of 24th ult. gives the following as the principal points of the representation made to the . Ottomati'Porte Syria and Palestine: , I " l. The two Powers desire .lhat the Sultan should appoint a special Governor for Palestine and thc‘Holy Cities, hcving his seat of government at Jerusalem, and the port of Jafi'a as his means of communication with the Mediterranean. ‘2. They demand a suppression of all the Vexations to which the Christians have been sub- jected. 3. An impartial administration of justice. 4. Protection for the pilgrims visiting the Holy Land. 5. A settlement of all the differences between the Greek and Armenian churches. 6. The appointment ofa com- mission to effect this end. 7. The re-establishment of such churches and convents as have been destroyed or damaged." ' The Hamburg Correspondent says that letters ‘from Paris, received at Berlin, represent the most perfect good understanding as prevailing between the Cabinet of the Tuileries and the other European Powers on the Eastern question, after conferences 'between M. Guizot and the Ambassadors resident in Paris, in which Count d’Arnim, the Prussian Minister, took an influential part. Russta AND ClnCAsslA.—ODESSA, March 24.—It seems to be the intention of Russia to employ this year a very considerable force against the Circaseian moun- taineers. The division of infantry stationed at Trgan- rog (belonging to the 3d corps ofthe army) is already gone to Georgia. The llth divisioii, stationed On the other side of the Dniester, has also received orders to be in readiness to march, havin been already raised to its full complement. The twelft i divisibn remains, for the present, in Besssrabia; but is recruiting with great acti- vity, and seems only to wait till it is complete. In Russia, no body. knows what they are about, as Nicholas keeps it all to himself. DEATH or Barium—They write from Rome. on the 23d,thlit the celebrated Bergami, who»'ligured in the trial of Queen Caroline of England, died, a few days before, at his villa of Fossombrone. Tun Imminent—The English papers evince that much anxiety exists res cting the fate of this large steamship. She had been near y forty days out at last accounts. Her Majesty on leaving Buckingham Palace lbr Winsor Castle, gave commands, that in case of news of the safety of the President arriving, a special messenger should be despatched with the intelligence. An English W gives the follow- ing scrap on this subject. _ “The following are the tonnage anhimensions of the steam vessel which now excites so much interest, as com- pared with those of a man-of-war built about the same period :—Prcsident: Tonnage, 1,921 1.94. Length, 238 120 guns) :—Tonnage,2,700; Lengteh, m that; Breadth, i feeL—Onc thing is clear, that r as m steamers are all very inadequately supplied with boats, 'ch, in the event of accident, might be available.” Admiral Stopford had been appointed Governor of Greenwich Hospital. ’ Sir George Arthur is to be contian on the Stafl' of B. N. CAmorica, until fung orders. _‘ HINL—Hlppll' y 6 blue dispute appears, to be. again' ' , tdrawing to a following are stated as the terms or (:6 w ic been entered in betw the belliétrent authorities: to, can late “1. The cession of the Island and harbour of Hon on tothe British Crown. Alljiut charges and damagng '0 1- ll, 0 north the annual insta upont Whampoa till new settlement. by Austria and Russia, in favour of the Christians of . feet; Breadthithin paddle-boxeg)42fiieL—-Man-011W”, T ' ‘ ' V aid as if ' upon the commerce carried on there, to be p I mfigde were conducted at Wharapoam “2. An indemnity to the Britishd (3)7: re 1 000 000 payable at once, an ’ , lments, ending in 18 “3. Direct oflicial intercourse / . . . nton to be opened Within tl‘l n ofCu . at e Chiu2seelilndw Year, and to be cat-rig: aon further arrangements are practice fan” Details remain matters of negotis i . _._——- UNITED STATES. BOSTON,bAp:il ' a become asu jec o - l:ifllblgw York: On Saturday dated, in the' Assembly, as; ' t’d to communi be reques 8if any, which has mainder in equal 1 between the two countries a 4. The Tar: Case or Mch hate in the Legislature last, Mr. Sivarklgimer 0 solution that the overnor I s ondence, ' 3kg): plizgsebdriee‘iiort'liepExecutive aighplzity of the United Sia’tesand of the State of New 0 a.de a long In support of his resolution, the mover in onference speech, in which he speaks of the recent chr Crit- betwcen the United States Attorney Genera ,York- as a tendon; and the Attorney General of _Newh. coLmry. proceeding entirely without parallel in {dis dag out The interference of Mr. Crittenden is cons_i grilarati‘m ofthe legitimate sphere of his duty; and his cram the that there is no evidence in the case tohvga; and an conviction of M‘Leod, after a grand jury 3 ‘0“) fore.- indictment, as a most unwarrantsble attempk of Mr stal the verdict ofa jury oftrial. Theremarh re ‘hé Swarkhamer, that 'this is tlie'first‘tilllehwte Chief Executive authority of the Union, throng {Steffen} prosecuting ofiicer, has ever taken on l’tselfto Isl!l tes 6f with the criminal jurisprudence of any ofthe a this Union, is probably correct‘. d jUdg The debate was continuet , an , reports, rather,of an exciting character. Mr. Hgfi'fliltaizg after stating the circumstances from which the di ctu be proceeded, seemed to think that MfLeod was is .to justified in what he had done, even 4fhe admit“: la- hsve instigated the burning of the Caroline ; and (dcc'al red, whatever might be the decismn of the pi] lci f tribunals, he could notpnsider M‘Leod as gully o murder. Mr. O'Sullivan (a foreigner, and one whom the British Government would claim as a subject, if he were on British ground) advocated a reference of the mattzr to the committee'on the judiciary; and though he a - mitted that there was no pOWer in the federpl govern- ment to arrest the proceedings of the Senate Courts, yet “ to execute the individual in question, would an atrocity more atrocious than the ordinary infliction of the barbarian punishment ofdeath.” Mr. Chstfield saidrhe should not have taken the floor, but for the extraordinary course of Mr. Hoffman, whose speech, had it been made in the British Parliament, would have earned for hima reputation across the water. such as very few men ever reach there. He contended that the British government had tried and executed American citizens taken in British territory under similar circumstances. He concluded his remarks by as in —— . yA gBrit'llih subject has been seized and indicted, and 3‘ guilty. sinful would hang him. 1 would never crouch. or truckle, or cringe, to the assumed omnipotence 0} ing from the Journal of. Commerce. lment of $6,000,000, . 4 / to 600 men, and these were hotly pun“ . a Tns’wss'r INDiss.‘ (LL—The Kingston Royal Gazette . tiff: present Mercantile distress‘there . 7 zizased by the stoppage of 8" 'emmanml umbia and the countermanding all orders f nods. o 'lghree hun - a, had arriv . . ligating. family to be provided with a l attendance, gm, ' ' lands and medica. ‘ I iésfin’mgméled in reading, writinbeg, and. rules of arithmetic, the flimsy;y ttiin ":5", r . , .. allowed two pence pe . oriher with one shilling and Six pence P9,. bars - for the able first class labourers, mg Bi ie’nt mechanics, two shillings sterling 8 Sr Luann—The German Imflugrgnu; ported into St. Lucia, appear to have an, pectations. Sea Life . . " sea-life, that it is so a ce If a man—With revereiiv one pursuit uaturalto man or boyhood}! he it at sea; if he love anglingnor are er, billiards, or his children, or cricket, all; da ving or elegance, or eating, orthls air] any“, fishiiig, or fowling,-o;’ gardentx’igx,ot::l ogm . ‘ i re , , or inde cndence, or eisu , tress, 0!: his mother, or neWS, or. novelty, or racing, or shooting, or skating,dor tennis, or his wife, or—or—or—ip er short save salt beef and salt water, ct inn , a s . —Socicty in India. dred Scotch Immigrams, Goal. ed at Savanna.|'.Mu' , .— “no menuhammuasuaa.-aaaa. —What can there be in the i ' ' -surpassing, so m be it \said—hg attic continuance SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1841. NTAS Steamer arrived here y b the Mails. Since lost here,“ e considerable repairs, and is now fig: appearance, but not, we believe, in .- We understand that she is to ply tivice a Charlottetown and Pictouinand that she etown once a fortmg _. Ge’f‘hi news by the Mail received yesterday, ‘ much political interest. I . g The Pocano her first trip Wit we understand, been , confirming , the , A Despatch has, I Excellency the Lieutenant Governor, . merit of the Hon. Charles Young to a seat in Council of this Island. . Pitoviscut. Sscnnrsu I, »HALirax,28th A‘pfl , “ His Excellency the Lieutenant Governor has has; make the followin provisional ap Ointments, name The Hon. S. G. Archibald, . L. D. late Al to bc Master of the Rolls, in the place of the H l i links deceased. ‘- ‘ A. _ FaTlie Hob. James W. Johnston, late, Sollmtor her,Ma'esty's Attorney General, Queen s Advocate General. ' The Hon. James B. Uniacke, jestv’s Solicitor General. ' ' _ [We understand Mr. Archibald Wlll else succe tion ofJudge ofthe Court of Wes Admiraltqu. Barrister tit law, to s sacrificed as a victim to British insolence. If Great Britain acknowledges the set, then I would have satis- faction. I would compel them to make restitution, or I would resort to the last alternative. Mr. Huhbell aid—— He resided in a County in which the relatives of the murdered Abraham Durfee now lived, and that a breeze came over the green hills of that county that did tell to every denizen of it, that there was a widowed. mother and orphan children dependent on their bounty, and that the felon who perpetrated the deed,.standing on the borders of our own State, justified the deed, and gloried in the act of having shed the blood of an American citi- zen. He spoke the sentiments (he said) of the people ofNew York ; and he went on to tell those who sustain- ed the proposition to send this man home, that the Gover- nor would sign no law for that purpose, and that if he did, the people would not ratify it. He (Mr. Hubbell) stood there, he said, to justify those ’who, at Lockport, wlien njudge, without discretion, instigated by the British emissaries, was about to set at liberty the culprit who stands charged with murder, interposed to prevent it. He (Mr. Hubbell) had he been there, would have stood around the jail, and would have united in preventing the release of the culprit, through the fully or corruption of the judge. He averred that there was not power enough—there was not gold enough in Great Britain to take this man's body out of the county of Niagara, until he shall have gone through the form of a trial. It was enough to know'that he was small who gloried in hav- ing shed the blood ofa citizen of this State. He (Mr. Hiibbell) believed he did shed the blood ofa citizen. Mr. Simmons interposed, deprecating a course cal- culated to prevent a fair ttial, in this State, at least. Mr. Hubbell’s answer was, that if not guilty he was a lisr--if guilty, he was a murderer. . The Assembly had not decided on the adoption of the resolution at the last advices. Rennasn or Manoo! !—-The New York Herald says, Mr. Delevan from Washington informs us “ that at a cabinet council on Saturday last, it'was agreed to deliver up McLeOd to the British authorities.” 0n the 12th ult., a Snow Storm took place, which extended from Maine as far south as Baltimore. The Phila- delphia Gazette says :— “This is the 12th oprri], and verily, March, which is allowed twelve days of the month by the proverb, is deter- mined to do its spite on the last day of its supremacy. The snow is filling thick and fast, being, as we are told, from “three tofour inches deep, as we write.” The North Ameri- can of Tuesday says, the storm ofMonday was almost un- _ ralleled. The snow fell steadily all day; and beyond the imits of the town it is said to bemore than a foot deep. 0f the great quantity of snow which fell in New York we have records in all the papers of that ci . The Tatrlér of uesday evening says l—“ The body 0 .snow which has fallen in the 12 hours, is probably as great as the quantity which fell during any storm last winter. The sky looks as Wintry as at any time during the regular winter menths. BRAZIL. Bunnos Amos, Dec. 14. inform you ofa complete cos ofGen. Oribe [in the i —_I have the satisfaction to trtiulnphptahieved by the for- " crest 0 0V. those of Gen. Lavalle, who was entirely fidtsdd’hogirr 1500 men' killed. All his infantry, with chle’rs and officers,-—all his artillery and 90 wsaons were lost He himself escaped with only four .rraien,,ab‘andonin . the remains of his army,-which scarcely now amounted ield an American right' ledge of the fact that an American citizen a '9 DEPUTY Govmuvoa or CANADA—Cog? A'ivorlinn DEPUTY Govnnnon.—We cop gular official notice from the Montreal Transcript: Govznnnsnn‘r House, Montreal, 8th A , His Excellency the Governor General has haen " appoint Th'omas William Clinton Murdoch. , ~, :Y pleasure, to be his Deput‘ , within the Province of _ , exercise ofthe Pow‘grs, unctions and Authoritiesrla I as Governor ofthe said Province, in so far as the is V the granting of Warrants, for the payment of Hope Licences, and Ferry Licences, in and for the said I" ’ By Command, - D. DALY, We take the following from the Monthly" April last, published at Toronto, U. C. The Assembly of Prince Edward Island, solution to appropriate the sum of £200, if it ; ll“ quired, towards the expense of obtaining asu ration, and estimate of the proposed line _. ‘ - the Bay of Fundy and the Gulf of St. Law ' ' Scotia, New Brunswick and Canada make , advances for the same object.—As this matter before the Canadian Legislature, we copy the statement respecting it. Titus Smith, a -: Scotia since 1783, says the country is low and above 25 feet above the level of high tide in Fundy, and well adapted either for a canal ’ H Brown, Esq., Mining Engineer, gives im' adding that the mouth of the canal in the. ‘4 require protection by a breakwaterf Wm. - Surveyor, surveyed the country betweenthe and the, Gulf of St. 'Lawrence; it has no ’ swampy all the way through; two or three- the tide locks would be sufficient. The to is sand for two feet; there is clay und i2— favourable to the object. The distance is a ~ the Tidnish river on the Bay Verte Side i- v for three miles. The water in this Boyle. water for two miles, except the channel, whiéli feet water at the mouth of the river and the tide is about 7} feet. Good shelteribn river. Vessels of250 or 300 tons would be? the canal without difiiculty. No obstacleto beng formed. The object of it is to coon Halifax. and New Brunswick with theSt. also Prince Edward 'Island with them. A more iiivourable location for a canal or not have been selected; and when the canal, connecting Halifax with the Ba of .‘ completed, (and from £80,000 to 3100,” already expended on it, by- ‘which all the eluding locks and cuttings, is far advanced,) ’ supposmg the Bay'Verte canal finished, 5! commodious navigation from Halifax I .. Fundy to ghe St. Lawrence, alw Issll:ll of war of incalculable benefit. ays I ‘ r I; Mncnamcs’ INs'rr'ru .— the Rev. J. Kno TE on wed” ‘ . _ .x delivered a lecture, in con ‘ interesting subject which he last week ' ' = notice of the institute—“ Mental Philosophy, . by Phrenology.” Having in his~ former l " exposition of the feelings and instincts corn animals, he proceeded to the discussion oft ties peculiar to man, Which are necessary lo ‘ being, and which prompt him to promote the his fellow men. The grand moral powers (I? - 'f ness, benevolence and veneration, were’poln 1 iv baSis of Ethical philoophy—as those faculliél‘ ‘ benevolent an”d wilse firearm has endowed the new creation, to ea him to deli ' 7 and fellowhip of his God, and in €13;ng ofthe inferior creatures. The faculties of. ' ‘ ' ideality, 8m. 8w. were then considered, and - abuse defined, and illustrated by a valid}: intellectual powers of‘ gemfpti'on; com '—t eir operatmll' tion were next discusse the discovery, distinction and application