he —' ‘Vol. v1.3 LAND ASSESSMENT. Treasurer's Office, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, 301h May, 1843. .IN pursuance of the Act of the General Assembly of this Island, made and passed in the Seventh year ofthe Reign ~of' His lato Majesty King William the Fourth, intituled fin Act {or levying an. Assa ssmcet on all Lands in this Island—I do here- ‘ y publicly notify the Owners or Uccupjers of Land within this y‘ island, for vivlrich the Annual Assessment charged thereon bv the! was really “"d ""137 a literary her"- ‘said recited Act, of Four Shillings, lawful money of’tliis Islarid,‘ for every Hundred Acres ol'WIlderness or unimproved Lands corr- ft-taioed In the several Townships, and the several Islands belong- ‘JIng thereto, and the sum of'l‘wo Shillings for every Hundred ur-i-r-s,‘ of'cultivated or improved Lands in the said several 'l‘owuslrips l'lVeS bistro from his virtues, PRINCE EDWARD - AND ADVERTISER. 'V CHARLOTTETOWN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1843. i’Literature. ' SIR WALTER SCC'I‘T, AND HIS DEEDS. Ml‘..WEED, In. one of his late letters, has collected the followrng facts, In respect to this illustrious writer and his Sir Walter Scott’s youngest daughter, of whom there is a most spirited portrait at Abbotsford, as is known, survived her father’s death but a few days, and Mrs. Lockhart died in ‘1837. Two sons, one a Lieut. Colonel in the British army, and the ntlreran under Secretary in the Foreign Ofiice, are . a .n. p... ~—- [No. I groaning of the masts and yards, the quick, shrill rattling of the cordage, and the ponderous dashing ofthe uplifted deer. 1 All these were numbered among the advantages of my posi- l tiou as, firmly planted, Iopeneil rrry eyes and ears, heart and 1 soul, to the beautilill frightfulness of the tempest around and , r, ' . , _ . ‘ . . _ y . . . . . . . tetuniaiy concerns. No one can read these srrrrple facts ,‘all tliatreuraiu of this family. Alibotsford, though still cn- the ocean beneath me. without admiration. There are various kinds ofheroes. Sra \VALTER SCOTT ' _ One who would adorn the order of Kirighthooil. Ihe character of SIR WAL'I'IgIt Sco'r'r,_vicWerl in airy of {the varied ainl ’evcu chequered aspects in which it presents itself to the World, excites our admiration. llis genius de- Vthu, after be supposed him- -and Islands as aforesaid; and the sum of Four Shillings for each ! sell'iii the possession of air independence, be was overtaken «every cultivated or improved Town, Pasture, Common, and \-‘ a- , «.ter Lot Mali-resold; and the suit) of Two Shillings lIlHI eight-l pence for each and every Town Lot, Pasture Lot and \Vaier Lot, l ,grnnted in the Towns and Royalties offieorgetown and Prince- Ii'Iwn . and the sum of One shilling and four-pence for each and every cultivated or improved Town, Pasture and Water Lot, granted in the said last mentioned Towns and Royalties, and so in proportion for it less quantity; ariil the sum of One peony per -Iicre on each and every acre of‘cultivatcd or improved Laird in fire Royalty of Georgetown, called reserved Lands; and the sum -of‘ Two-pence per acre on each and every acre of'suclr Lands as way be deemed uncultivated or unimproved Lands, Is payable, :that unless the Assessment for the current year he paid into llrc ', hands, or the hands "filly Deputies, on or before the 'I‘weiitylirst : «if December, I843, I shall, on the last day ofthe next Hilary Term, " at Charlottetown, make Proclamation ol'all such hands as shall, then be in urrear for non-pa) merit ol'lhe sums charged thereoon, agreeably to the directions of‘tlu- said Act. .I. SPENCER SMITH, Treasurer. , ' Treasurer’s Ofiice,lstJuly,1843. 1 N compliance with the provisions of the Act of the H.General Assembly, for levying an Assessment on all Lands Within this Island, I have appointed the following persons to be Receivers of the said Assessment : Prince County. r _ J Joseph I’opc, Budrque. I , Thomas C. Compton, 5t. Eleaniir’s. r ' James You, Port lIill. ' John Cambridge. Allan Forsytli, Cascunipt-qoe. ‘ ’1 Robert 1‘1}lltllllt|ti, I‘rinretowu. ‘ Queen}? County. James l’igeon, New London. : Thomas Fair-harm, Sable, a“ Solomon Desiriisav, Clriiilotletown. ‘ ' Allan M‘Doug'rilfliclfast. r I _ King‘s County. ‘ ‘ John .Iardme, St. Peter's. Alexander M-I)ou:ild, St. Margaret's. \Villiam Mai-gowaii, Sunnis. Hugh Mucdorrald, Three Rivers. James Richards, Murray Harbour. J. b‘ ’l-llVCISI’c SM I'I‘II, Treasurer. LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE. ' HE Subscribe has been appointed Sub-Agent of l! ,- 3 the firllowiug Insurance Companies, viz: l. The National Loan Fund Life Assurance Society of " London. The New Loan Fund Life insurance Company of 3: New York. . 'The Hartford and Protection Fire Insurance Companies ‘ of Hartford, Connecticut. 5‘ , , And as he is furnished with blank Forms of'Application, and zip possession of all the information which may be desired by . iersons who wish to effect Insurance he will be he )' to re- Ii I , . , , ’ pl 3 , ~eeire applications and transmit the same to the Agent at Hali- ], ‘_ fax. Please apply to HENRY PALMER. ,. '- 'AIILIANCEILIII‘E AND NIKE INSURANcE i G 0 HI P A N '1!" OF L 0 N I) 0 N. CAPITAL £5,000,000, STERLING. PR E1111 UIII—-— .IIODERA TE. CHARLES YOUNG, Agent. Charlottetwwn, P. E. I. June 6,1843. POWNAL STREET ABP. ‘ P‘HV'WI 5”“er 1" ,‘trious demonstration ol'geuius, industry, 'Lliarlottetown, I do hereby give notice to all concerned, that 1 i,.,.e(mm-s, as well they might, ‘ IiirrrrrimungyY Wm". find every uncultivated or unimproved Tow'n‘ Lot, Pasture Lot, . by pecuniary mismrtirue, with what lion-hearted firrrrrri-ss he 'Lom‘mon Lot and Watt-r Lilli gl’illllfid 1” I"? ,1 ‘_’“’” 3"‘1 “Wu”! 1’ met the shock, and relyuur upon his pen deteriiiiocd to work vof Charlottetown; and the sun of Two hllllllllgs for each andmmuql, .u, ., , ,. H' ,, I T, - l l . i b i ‘ A , _ - .1“ in, our of ie its. bee With what true philosophy he. writes in Irisjournal: l JANUA air 22d—I feel neither dishonored nor broken down I last time iii the balls I have built. But death would have, taken them from me il'irrisliirtuue had spared them. There‘, IS‘IIISI another die to turn up against me in the rrnr of ill-l lock—i. e., ifI should break rrry magic wood in the fall from this elephant, and lose popularity with my fortune! * a a a a as a it But I, find my eyes moistening, and that will not do. I will not yield wrthiiuta fight for it When 1 set irrysclf to work' ‘doggeilly,’ as Dr. Johnson would have said, I am just the / same man I ever was. Again, when negotiations were pending with his crcdio tors. Sir Walter says : . “ If they perdrit Ine,1 will be their vassal for life, and dig Iii the mine of'my imagination to find diamonds (or What may sell for such), to make good iin engagements.” And again: V ) “Now that the shock ofiliscovcrv is over and passed, 1 am much better off on the whole. I feel as ii'I had shaken off'my shoulders a great mass of'garmeuls, rich indeed, but always more a bortherr than a courlort. *9 * If 1 could see those about. me as indifferent to the loss of rank and for- tune as I am, 1 should becompletely happy. As it is,—-'I‘Iore must solve that sore, and to Time I trust it. ’1‘ ‘l‘ A most generous letter from W'alter :Iiid_.lriirc, oiliiriug to interpose- with their fortune, &c. God Almighty forbid! that were too unnatural in me to accept, though dutiful and affection- ate in them to offer.” And again: “FEB. 3—This is the first time since my troubles that I felt, at aWakening, ‘1 hail drunken deep Of'all the blesseduess ofsleep.’ 1 made not the slightest pause, nor dreamed a single dream, nor even changed my side. This is a blessing to be thankful for.” r “ When the pecuniary calamity came upon him, and, like Byron, he saw ‘his hooselrold goods shivered around him,’ Sir Walter was engaged upon f \Voodstock.’ Alter bis of- fairs had been put into the hands of Trustees, he ‘returueil to the wheel,’ and on the 4th of February says, “From the 19th oi'Juiinui-y to the 2d of February. lliClIi-, sive, is exactly fifteen days, during which time, with the in» tei'veiition of some days" idleness, to let imagination brood on the task a little,l bch Written a volume. A v'olume, at cheapest, is worth £1,000. This is working at the rate of £24,000 a-year! But then we most not bake buns faster than people have appetites to eat them. They are not essential to the market, like potatoes.” From this time forward,Sir \Valter labored with indomit- able enei'gy to extinguish a debt from the coinage of'lris brain, of more than £300,000, for which he had become lia— file by his business re atioos with Constable 8;. Co., arid Ilal- lautyne 8L Co. But the labor was too severe, even for his herculeau mental and physical powers. There were admo- nitiohs ofthe fate which awaited him, as early as 1826, as may be seen from a note in his private pmrnal: “MARCH l4—VVhat a detestable feeling this fluttering of the heart! 1 know that it is nothing organic, arid that it is entirely nervous; but the effects ofit are sickening to a ile- gree. Is it the body which brings it on the mind, or is it the mind that inflicts it on the body?” The result of Sir VValter’s literary labors, from January, 1826, to January, 1828, was a dividend of six shillings to the pound to his creditors, amounting to the enormous sum, III the aggregate, of £40,000, or two hundred thousand dollars! What other author ever iliil, or ever will realize such ano- ther sum from his own iritelei-tual' labors! For this illus— and integrity, tlic him their Alier this dividend hail been made, in his private tedious and dark path, but it “I see. before rhea long, If I die in the harness, as Is leads to stainless reputation. "I AVING been appointh by His Excellency the .3 » Lieutenant Governor to collect llic Subscriptions towards ‘ l- ‘ making the intended I'Vliarf' at the end of , ,BIIHII call forthwith, on the respective subscribe”, f0" the “"“MM [hanks] ill Jéflélfir subscriptions, and I will also receive the same at my ,J-nurlml he says: " . I Y! ‘ i w ill ROBERT III) ICIIINSUN. w Charlottetown, July 10th, 1843. MORRIS’S C \RDING MACHINES. ’ HE Subscriber having engaged to erect a CARD-I ING MACHINE on the Island, early in the Spring, begs to: intimate to any persons who may be desirous of availing them- selves ofhis visit to obtain such machines at that time, may be accommodated at the lowest possible price. An early application to .relative to Terms, 61.9., will be attended with which a delay will prevent. . \ WILLIAM mounts. i " Sackville, N. B.,Nov.10th, 1843. ll ' in, MO F F A T’ S TU , WEGETABLE LIFE PILLS AND PHIENIX BITTERS. ‘ H E S E superlative Family Medicines have long since acquired an established reputation for direct and invariath .efiicacy in all the prevalent and ordinary diseases,_as yvell as in many .others ofa peculiar and aggravated character. Their Virtues are proved r by the voluntary testimonials of the persons they have cured, rind who .accompany their certificates with their names and places of residence ‘Tkese certificates now amount lo thousands, being hundreds to each yparticular kind of disease. The ' embrace Ihe most frightful and in— 355% . clouded, sallow, unhealthy ‘0" Weierate cases of Scrrfirla, Pies, spepsic, Jaundice, Bilious {1nd ol“. r “Liner a actions, acute and chronic Rzeumatism, Asthma, Brant/Ill", ‘ - .‘Sch as as well as Mucous Consumption, habitual L‘oslirteiresr, IVorms, .‘Stimiach and Bowel complaints of all kinds, headache, giddrness and l f :flervous debility, eruptive diseases, and the __ . appearance of the skin, arising from various causes of III health, Ferer . and A ue of'every variety, settled pains in the side, 'hack, organs and .‘Jimbs, umors, ulcers, but breath and inward fever, night sweats, and , - ;.general weakness and ass of appetite, the mumps, swollen face and gums, . affections ofthe bladder, kidner , spleen and pleura, andthe sickness inci- tofemuler, together With very many other maladies which cannot be here enumerated. The certificates of cure in all these diseases are '_:unm_ensern number, and clear, dliect and explicit in description, and ._mining as they d0, in cyery case,from the persons cured, they are indis- _‘putable and conclusive rn authority. These inestimable medicines should imfefm'e be 1‘91" by every family and grown ersen‘in the Union, as ithey- 'Il hefound to he not only the best reme ies for disease, but also i. it! filmst certain Prevenlallves, and the surest renovators-of sound, cheerful mud elastic health. They are singularly mild and agreeable in their ,.operation, and though . perfectly effectual, never occasion raven the so. Q ~ E. i. 1“ flv temporary prostratioii and nausea which always follow the use of coarse 1"}: “do par 8 and the use of calomel. Prepared wholesale and retail by 98‘ RDr.-Wm._ _. Mom, 675 Broadway, New York. For sale also by the :agcnto—NszoaLMay 30. I ' . ' GDQPEB-éb-ILREMNER, Agentcfnr Prince .gldmrd Island. E very likely, [shall (lie with honor. -shall have the thanks ofall concerned, and the approbation ,‘ofa gale, whose terrors had been heightened by its sudden- lol' my own Conscience.” lwith which nature endowed Sir W. Scott. that they . Irwin Mr. C. C. DAvrsos, in Charlottetown,l an advantage, 1 Ifl achieve my task, I Brit human faculties, though with all the strength and tenacity of iron and steel, may be over-taxed. as Were those Some ofthe ru- us creditors who made merchandize of'lris brain, to use his own burning figure, ‘trcateil me like a recusuut turn- spit, and put a red hot cinder into the wheel along with uie.’ And, finally, the ‘f'cather which breaks the carriel’s back,’ having been added to Sir Walter’s burden, he was struck down by paralysis, and, after lingering a few months, was gathered to rowing friends who surrounded him, most have been the breaking oftbat athletic frame, the quenching,r of that tower- ing spirit, the going out ofthat light which no' Promethean spark can re-illume. We followed Sir Walter from Abbotsford, the theatre of his glorious achievements, to Dryburgb, whose ruined Ab- bey is hallowed by his dust. How appropriately chosen, for the final repose of such precious remains! What monu- ment so expressive and fitting as the crumbling walls and lofty but SILENT towers ofan ancient Scottish Abbey? Dust to dust! ashes to ashes! ruin to ruin! Drybnrgh Abbey has a romantic location,ab0ut five miles from Abbotsford, on the river TWeed, in a wood whose foli- age conceals it from View until you approach its ivy protect- ed walls. It. was built in 1150, by Hugh de Moreville, Con- stable of Scotland, upon a site previously devoted to III-Iridi- cal worship. EdWard 11., in his retreat from an unsuccess— ful invasion of‘ Scotland, in 1322, burned the Abbey, which was rebuilt by Robert 1., and again partially destroyed b: the English in 1544. In 1604, the Abbey became the reel- dence and property of the Earl of Mar. It now belongs to the Earl of BtIclrau, who is a relative ofthe late Sir Wrilter, and who resides near it. The remains ofSir Walter repose by the side of those of'his wife (who died a few years earlier), ‘in St. Mary’s aisle, one ofthe most solitary, and yet strik- ing features of the Abbey. Tire day alter his ‘ poor Charlotte,’ the widower] poet said iir hisjournal: “The whole scene floats as a sort of rum before ore—the ibeautiflil day, the grave ruins covered and hidden among :clouds of' foliage, where the grave, even iii the lap of beauty, lay lurking and gaping for its prey.” his fathers—How painfully sublime to the rim-1 lt‘uurbercd, will continue the property ofthe present Sir \Val- lter. The copyright of the Waverley Novels has extin- iguisheil much of the debt since the Author’s death, and lwill, should Parliament extend the lows protecting this species ol'property, ultimately wipe out the whole amount. admiration ofSir \VIrlter Scott, and of all that is connected .with his writings, his character, and his irremory, is less ‘f'lilliusiasllu than my own; and though lireVer weary in reading or writing of the author of \Vrr\ci'ley,l will not ,hazIn-il at this sitting, a heavier draft upon the good nature of thy friends. A srorfu AT SEA. lby thi- bad—now reallv bad news, that I have received I r E ‘ V , I - t ‘ - . rlracls rO‘n B's’to "Illa'flf’" Jotll'na o a? rrc cros. [have walked my last on the ilomaiiislhave planted—sat the ( f I i I p l "‘ l l fa JU” a 9 i [hr Jill/infic.) Oh! what is there in nature mgr-and as the. mighty ocean? The earthipiakc and Volcano are over sublime in lllt‘ll‘ dis- play of dcstrui'tivo power. But their sulrliiriity is terrible l'ropi the consciousness ofdzmgcr with which their exhibi- tio s are witnessed—and besides, their violent agony is im- pub-ire, sudden and transient. Not so the glorious ocean. loits very playfir tress you discover that it can be terrible as 1‘tho eart'ripiaki-; but the spirit ol'bcnevoloirce seems to dwell in its bright and open countenance, to inspire your cordi- iIi-ni'e. The irrouutaius and valleys, with their bold liuca- ments and luxuriant verdurc, are beautiful; but theirs is not like the beauty of the ocean; for here all is life and move- ment. This is hot that stationary beauty of rural scenery, in which objects retain their fixed and relative position, and wait to be exairrioeil and admired in dctail. No, the ocean prerfcirtsa moving sceiri-rv, which passes iii review before audiarouod you, challenging adoriratimi. 'I‘liis (lay I was gratified with what I had often de- sired to witness—the condition ofthe sea in a tempest. Not that 1 would allege curiosity as a sufficient plea for desiring that which can never be witnessed without more or less of danger to the spectator; and still less, when the gratifi- cation exposes others to anxiety and alarm. Let rue be uh- rlH’siiiod, their, as meaning to say my desire to witness a storm was not ofsuch a kind as to make me indif‘lbrcut to the apprehension which it is calculated to awaken. Ilut iii-title from this,tlicre was nothing I could have desired more. I hail contemplated the ocean in all its other phases—and theyare almost innumerable: birt until to-day I had never seen it Ill correspondence with the tempest. Aller a breeze of some sixty hours from the north and northwest, the wind died away aborit‘foor o’clock in the afternoon. The calm continued till about nine in the even— ing. The mercury in the baroirreter fell, in the meantime, at an extraordinary rate; and the captain predicted that We should encounter It “gale” from the southeast. 1 did not hear the prediction, or 1 should Iiot have gone to bed. The “gale” came on, however, at about Il o’clock; not violent at first, but increasing every moment. Islcptsoondly until after five in the looming, and then awoke with ii confused r collection ofa good deal of rolling and thumping through ili‘e night, wlrirli wasoocuoioned by the dashing ofthe waves against the ship. There was no unusua! trampling and shout- ing—or rather screaming—on deck ; and soon after, a crash ripon the cabin floor, followed by one ofthe most unearthly screams lever heard. The passengers, taking the alarm, sprang from their berths, and without waiting to dress, rah about asking questions without waiting for or receiving any answers. llurryiog on my clothi‘s,l found that the shriek proceeded from the steWard, who had, by ll lurch ofthe ship, been thrown, in his sleep, from his solii, some six feet to the cabin floor. By this time I found such of the passen- gers as could stand at the doors of the hurricane—house, ‘* holding on,” and looking out in the utmost consternation. This, I exclaimed mentally, is what I wanted, but I did not expectit so soon. It was still quite dark—Four of the soils were already in ribbons. The winds whistling through the cordage; the ram dashing forinusly and in torrents; the ‘noise and spray scarcely less than I found them under the 'gl'l‘tlt sheet at Niagara. And in the midst nfall this, the captain with his speaking trumpet, the officers, and the sailors. screaming to each other in efforts to be heard, and mingling their oaths and curses with the angry voice ofthe teiiipcst—this, all this, iii the darkness which precedes the dawning of'ilay, and with the fury of the hurricane, corn- bined to form as much ofthe torriblv sublime as lever wish to witness concentrated in one scene. The passengers, though silent, were filled with apprehen- sion. What the extent of danger, and how all this would ter- illllllllle, were questions which rose in my own Irriiid, although unconscious of fear or trepidation. But to such questions were no answ‘ers, for this knowledge resides only with guides the storm and directs the whirlwind.’ \Ve only the coirrmeneement LIIII‘I‘B llliin who * =lrad encountered, however, as yet, lness, by the darkness, arid by the confusion. It continued to blow furiously for twenty-four hours; so that during the .wlrole day [enjoyed a view which, apart from its dangers, lwould be worth a voyage across the Atlantic. The ship was idriven madly through the raging waters, and even when it §Was irripiis‘sible to walk the decks without imminent risk of ibciug lifted up and carried aWay by the winds, the poor sat- ilors were kept aloft, tossing and swinging about the yards land in the tops, clinging by their bodies, feet and arms, With mysterious tenacity, t6 the spars, while their hands \vcre em- ployed in takirig‘in and securing sail. On deck the officers Inine men made themselves safe by ropes; but how the gal- ?lant fellows aloft kept from being blown out ofthe rigging l was equally a matter of wonder and admiration.—However, labout seven o’clock they had taken in what canvass had loot blown away, except the sails by means. of which the :vessel is kept steady. Al 9 o’clock the hurricane bad ac- lquired its full force—There was now no more wer to be ,done. The ship lay to—aud those who had her In charge (only remained on deck to be prepared foravhatcvcr disaster i might occur. The breakfast hour came, and passed, unheeil- ed by most of the passengers; though I found my appetite .qirite equal to the spare allowance ofa fast-day. ‘ By this time the sea was rolling up its hurricane Waves; laffixap indelible stain 1 l as refer to the reports _ V winter over i the llottcntot nation was formerly estimated to have exceed- fierecncss oft ed 200,000, and by survey ; reduced to and thatl might not lose the grandeur of such a view, fortified myselfagainst the rain and spray, in Leoat and cork-soled boots, and in spite ofthe . ithe gale, planted mysell'in a position favourable fora jofnll around me, and in safety, :works might hold together. 1 1storni at sea—but here was the original. ,are oftentimes graphic and faithful, they are necessarily deficient In n 1 painting cannot supply, and are that ‘tive. You have, upon canvass, the ship and the sea, they come from the hands of the artist, so they remain. the funeral of ruriversalmolion ofbothrrrethus arrested and madestatronary There is no subject in- which the pencil of the pointer in; kuowledges more its indebtedness ‘ in lhe attempts to delineate the se the attempt be successful, so far as ' would still be wanting llut perhaps I am exhausting the patience ol'tlrose whose‘ so long as the ship’s strong had often seen paintings of a l Society some years These imitations . as far as they go, but colony (meaning ompaniments which ‘llgO, may . . > . feeble and ineffec-_l midst of a district nlforty-lwo thousand square uiileshon the but as ; north side of . . . . ' The the aboriginal Inhabitants ol this country which to the imagination than that, were I to visit the colonies of New Zenland and a storm—But even could South Wales in fifieen or twenty years hwy I‘ , the eye is concerned, there . placed in the same predicament With their, the rushingpf the Irgrgiearip, the 1 In the meantime our ship gathered herself up into the, lcompactness nod buoyancy of a duck—and except the fea- iIIIQl'b‘ that hail been plucked from her wings before she had ltiure to fold her piuious—she rode out the whirlwind with- ,oot damage, and in triumph. It was not the least remark ' gable, and by far the most comfortable circumstance, in this jcou'ibioation of all that is grand and terrible, that, furious as :\Vf’l'e the winds, towering and threatening as were the bil- 3 lows, our glorious bark preserved her equilibrium against :the fury ofthe one, aiiil her buoyancy in despite of the nI-. ;tern:ne precipice and avalanche ofthe other. True it is,3ha 'was made to whistle through her carriage, to crank and moan through all her timbers, even to her masts. '.I'rt.lor it, is, she was made to plunge and rear, to tremble and reel' (and stagger; still she continued to scale the watery mafia—f llaiu, and ride on its very summit, until, as it rolled onwards l’fi'oui beneath her, she descended gently on her pathway, fi'cudy to triumph again ah‘d again over each succeeding wave, ' 1 At such it moment It was a matter of'profound deliberation which most to admire, the majesty ol'God in the winds and waves, or his goodness and wisdom in enabling his creatures to contend with and overcome the elements, even in the lierceucss of their anger! To cast one’s eyes abroad on the scene ilmt surrounded me at this moment, and to think that man should have said to himself, ‘1 will build myselfun ark in the midst of you, and ye shall not prevent my passage- any, ye indomitable wave shall hear me up, and yo winds shall waft me onward !’ And yet there we were in the ful- ucss ofthis Icnrful experiment! _— Farr: Cuoncn or Scenario—We allude, further, to the ('aliIIiiItutis events which, during the last year, have issued in the secession of nearly five hundred ministers from the Established Presbyterian Church of'Scotlnnd, and the for- mation ofthe Free Protesting Church in that country. For n full explanation ofthe reasons which led our valued bl'er, Iliren thus to act, and of the “ necessity" which they felt was “laid upon them” to take this step, reference must be made to other sources of information. We do not feelour-. selves called upon to express to you, in this official form, our individual opinions on some of the legal and historical details, which have been connected With this question in the various stages of its progress. But we do unbeaitating- ly declare our adherence to what we consider to be by much the. most important principle involved in the recentdiscuss sroos ;—-the one great principle, namely, That. it istbofriglit ofevcry Christian Church to claim, in matters which are plainly, and in their very nature, spiritual and ecclesiastical, and especially in reference to the sacred functions belon - iug to the admission, appointment, ordination, suspension, or deposition of Ministers, air unfettered freedom ol'actit'ig according to those deliberate convictions which it may have been led to form, and to embody in its standing rules and discipline, as to what is required from it, in such cases, by the Laws of'Clrrist contained in the Holy Scriptures. “the Civil Courts may regulate the terms ofChristiaIi commuJ niou, nury iuierposc their authority to compel the ordination of‘i-mrdidutes fon the ministry, may allow or forbid the ex- ercise of its sacred functions, then the word of God is be— come of none effect, and we must judge of right and Wrong in clrorcli-mattcrs by another standard than that which is set up in Zion. To such a conclusion we are persuaded that you are altogether opposed; and we conlideotly'truit, that as you have opportunity, you will rejoice io'sho'w your sympathy with men who have hony suffered the loss of’nll things, for maintaining Ilic supremacy of'Christ as the King ofhis people, and the paramount authority of his word as the law of the church. We have heard with much satisfacs tiori that some ofour people, in a few Circuits, have alreain given practical proof ol'tlreir high re ard for these excelleniifi Ministers and their flocks, by affording their pecuniary air to the Free Church of Scotland, either, in concurrence with the general efforts tirade in their several localities, by Chris: tiaus of other coumrorirties, or by a Public Collection in hair own chapels; and We shall rejoice to learn that similar aid has been afforded in other Circuits, at such time and in such ’ manner as may be deemed most convenient in each portion- lnr Circuit. to which any application may be made.~—./Inuutd Address ofthe Wesleyan Conference to (he .illclhodial Socielt'cs it: Grcnl Britain. "-— TIII: Anouicrxns.—A review of the progress ofcivilisatiun, as it is called, and its cfl‘ect upon the native inhabitants of our colonies, presents tI rrrelrrnclroly history. In North Ame- rii-a we perceive the utter ilcstructinn and extinction of many tribes, and the depopulution of others. I! is supposed, in round numbers, that the numerous tribes, many of which practised agriculture when the early settlers first colonised North Mexico, and then umouiitiut; to probably one million and.a liall‘ol‘people, are now reduced to less tliatir200, In Newfoundland, where, when first settled, the Indian race was l‘orirrerly very nurrrermis, having, aceordiugito the report at one tiuio “run rip frames for thirty miles to secure their game,” were reduced in 1810 to about 400 or 500, and they are now, I believe, totally extinct. Ol'tlre Carib nations, '4 the native inhabitants ofthe West Indies, there remains Only the tradition of their existence. . In New Holland, many ofthe tribes are extinct; and on- less sortie immediate steps be taken by the Government not a vestige ofthis rnirch mjured and maligned race will be in existence in a quarter ofu century limit. The historyjof' the aborigines of‘Vrru Diernan’s Land, like the preceding,is a history oferuelty, oppression, and in very many instances, death. The South Sea Islands, New Zealand included, are all at the present day, as regards their native inhabitants, fast following the fate ofthose already alluded to. . {from a population supposed to extend to nearly a million.“ Inhabi- tauls in New Zealand, the tribes have been fast decreasing, and 200,000 is supposed to be the remnant ofthe population ' ileft by European rapinc, cupidity, and disease of the worst ! and most fatal character, such as venereal, ophthalmic, mea- isles, scarlatina, and small-pox. The fouls given already in lcvidenec in relation to New Holland, are alone sitflicient to upon the character of any nation. Let from South Africa; the population of the most recent authentic reports is trow less than 32,000. In the words of'an extract given [in the report, and submitted to the Aborigines Protection ago, is the following touching appeal:— “ Anv traveller who may have visited the interiorpf this ' Cape Town) little more than twentyyears now stand on the heights of Albany, Ohio the Graafi‘ Reiiiet, and ask the question, where are lam hem . - in my former visit? without any one being able to inform - him where he is to look for them.” It is my firm dielief, New night be t' 151 the South l African aettlement.-—London filmde 341%“,- \ r 4 r l I