gpWARD WHELAN] Che Cram be Cram A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS. Chis is tene Liberty, when Free-born fen, having to advis 4 ner. e the ublic, man speak free.——eurimes. —_— Last Quarter 26th day, Oh. 54m. morning. — E. ee —_ - -- - = ancien = » Poeiry. SRE NNe rre, THE SONG OF THE CAMP" A CRIMEAN INCIDENT—BY BAYARD TAYLOR. ‘* Give us a song!" the soldiers eried. The outer trenches cuarding, When the heated guns of the camps allied, ~ Grew weary of bombarding. errr err ree The dark Redan, in silent scoff, Lay, grim and threatening under ; And the tawny mound of the Malakoff No longer belehed its thunder. There was a pause. The gauardman said— ** We storm the forts to-morrow ; Sing while we may, another day Will bring enough of sorrow.”’ Chev lav along the battery's side, Below the smoking cannon— . } te. from Severn and from Clyde Brave bearts, from Severn and trom { ya, .~ ’ , ’ = ‘) And from the banks of Shannon. % , They sanz of love, and not of fav ee ii. ,Orcoy. Was RB: tt} S vrhory , ' * «9° Kaeh heart reealled a did ‘ a 7 : but aii sang * Annie Laur \ i 5 r r ’ . a © i YP : ut : i : : . . ! Lik Thiat "ni 1 > patie Their battle-e prt ston ° ' y . ? Dear girl, her naw i Vae a +! Poy } ‘OE, i ‘ | sf 1. “ tile Ute ft oh ee 3. sy “a@5uca H tiie Stul Mm ps i } ' ? ’ ’ “* } vor i tin i i an } i ‘ ’ ih bo 4 ¢ hy ‘ : ‘ } ye! t a 1 \ \ : anid a bow } ris UPN r so 4 s ’ . ‘ ! sali UCUUWIGE OL tu i a- i , And Irish Nora's eyes are dim, ; —— ae . « mus» SE i j y , . - ye e E wilttl £2 i M il mourns for im wrt ‘ . os yw OY r os ~ wa hee e babidan S ne bravesé are the tendcresi-— Fire ke rare the daring. er ee Be ee EE ES PE OO 7 4 ; Ferns lata Piwcnve @leaninas from late Papers, ~’ e ; LL ICICLE LLL I RELY Oe On ee (i'rom the Londen *‘ Saturday Reeiae,”’ April 19.) A NIGHT WITH SPOONER. ‘To the euricus in ethical phenomena, the con-cience of a bie whi tea f& alt weal ae , = t } corporation, assembiy, or crowd, 1s a fine study. for there is such a thing as an informibg spirit im a noun of -multitud »f ’ Law wont? caw ar —mens agiiat molem, a3 a schoolboy would say. And a *¢ very curious fermentation souietimes comes of if,in tt pe of pauic terrors, popular delusions, suddea frenzies, and th like. This is only accorling to the common law of combus- tion. Particles in themselves harmless become hot ou com- pression, and tuke fire. DPovople are ill-tempered in a a led omnivus—they are s mply mad when it comes to a N Assembly, ora convention of the human i Nog is th the only phenomena preseuted by the corporate or collective eonscicnee, Vinilst the crowd ects frantie, the dividual yeta unprincipled. As the mass swells, sv the man shrinks —fhbe unit growing ibiittie y small In 2S OWN eyes As the : oe Ze body to which he belongs grows infuitcly large. As soon mi al ’ . 7? . € herZges iis cconpsc:ence | ? #8 a man becomes a railway direct oF. & in the board. So it is wthian M. P. Ue dares to do in} St. Stephen’s what he would be banished from ail res, evtable society for doing in the ordinary intercourses of life. This annual eraz2 about Maynooth furnishes a cage in point. The whole thing is a real insult to the country, as well as a disgrace to the great assembly in which it is perpetrated. There is not a shred of earnestness or sincerity in the pro- | ceeding, from first to last—it is a vast hypocrisy an] nake- believe. It is, in the language of the ring, “a plant”—it | is a mock duel, a sham fight, a mere playing at Parliament. it has as much real weight as a debate and division in the Union at Oxford or Cambridge. “ For this night only,” the Maynooth farce is acted by a company of amateur Senators. Ail the old women of Parliament have a clear stage, and certainly no favour in this Ecclesiazusze ; and for all practical purposes the jest might as well be played in the theatre of Bacchus as in the Chapel of St. Stephen’s. There are, doubtless, some fanatics, both in and out of the House, who rejoice in the great Maynooth night. It is the grain of salt which keeps Parliament from total corruption —the standing protest against national *apostacy—the one oasis in the great desert of Anti-Christian infidelity. If this solitary bray satisfied Exeter Hall—did the noble animal iméelf with his annua’ feat of absurdity and folly ‘afford to let Jeshurun wax fat fora single night, and kick to his heart’s content. The medieval Feast of the Ass, if we remember rightly, was only an annual joke. All Fools’ Day comes but once a year. We can endure a satur- nalia once in the twelvemonth. We do not grudge Spooner his night—or Berkeley his night—or Muntz his night. Kean has a benefit—so has Grimaldi. But, unfortunately, the House of Commons cannot play the fvol with closed doors. The Maynooth night is very funny; but it costs money. It endangers the tranquillity of a whole kingdom —it imperils the loyalty of six millionsof men, Lt insults» and wrongs, and exasperates those who ate at present among the most peaceable, contented, prosperous, and promising sections of the community. Having but just succeeded in it . ; oun | Baie arli . The House of C ‘ st Wai i ling. Mr. Spooner’s backers know this; and by this time British Parliament. ‘The House of Commons must wait until he knows it himself. He cannot find a sirgle statesman to ,toempty benches, and to march through Coventry with a | tagged regiment of rank and file. Even the unfortunates | Who, true to their miserable hustings professions, and false ito their own convictions, are forced to follow him into the ‘lobby, shirk the terribe infliction of his arguments. They jgive him their votes, but not their cars. Mr, Spooner himself, on Tuesday night, bad to pour forth an indignant ‘lamentation to the deserted benches behind him and the snoring seats before him. He snatched up a chance majority ; but the majority had no faith in their own votes. Not a man who has ever held effice, or who ever can hold office, or Who aspires to hold office, will undertake the responsibility of disendowing Maynooth. Not a notable voted in the majority. Bramley-Moore and Sir Andrew Agnew, Challis and Duke Pellatt and Tite—these gentlemen can afford to! vote that the sun moves round the earth, or that it is expe- dient to abolish east winds. That eminent and severe religionist, Sir C. Napier, has of course his own private prickings of conscience, and, fresh from the study of the ischoolmen and the Tridentine Deerecs, votes with fervour nd conviction against Liguori and Dens. But where are israeli and Pakington ? They had too much sense to join Spooner’s awkward squad, but too little straightforwardness ,and honourable feeling to vote aceording to their convictions, and against -hypoerisy and wrong. i 9 a ‘ i | These are the things which inspire distrust in public men, rand create ¢ utompt for the Legislature. Parliament i grievously suffers by such inseemly exhibitions. The repre- | Scutaiive system is lowered in popular estcem—-the friends of constitutional government begin to ask themselves how ‘far this tyranny of bigotry and ignorance, this influence on Parliament of platfor: 2 C we ! = iii t © © pact eye e. rm polemics and tea-table infallibitity is toga. Weean laugh at Spooner, but the absence. on such | . i i ; LU ne avsenee, on sucn eo . he dee P . 4 ‘casion, OF the Leads of a great party ready and saad - - on : . . to take office, is a more serious matter. If Conservative | ieieteacman ennnat ha'ld + oe Ale . iain. Aine statesinen cannot hoid t nopes tO Lin. “pooner that } * - il disendow Maynooth, they are bound in honour to ‘ountenance his mischicvous proceedings. Mr. Spooner ¥) y as a right to this—those ill-advised coustitucncies which ina ol a ats } - pa : . ‘xact the Maynooth pledge havea right to it—Irelend, ‘tuziand, and constitutional government, all demand _ this : iil wcciien thal + geen eae “hk - . 4 ¢ ne . tr.ightforward course. The endowment of Maynooth was + ’ 29 great experiment. Lt was an instalment of justice, and at ihe same time a stroke of policy. It was, in one sense, a | stand by him. The chiefs of his party leave him to grimace | the ratifications are interchanged before honorable members may assume the existence of a treaty of peace. But trade could not stop so long and the allied powers haye been obliged to withdraw their blockades, cancel their restrictive procla- mations, and declare that intercourse with our late antagonist is once more safe and free. It is much for Western Europe to be thus placed again in amicable relationship with an empire embracing a population of sixty-seven millions, and presenting an almost immeasurable area of the most productive soil in the world. Still more is it important to England, whose life-blood is commerce, to resume her intercourse with so many million customers belonging to a race by nature not less enterprising and industrious than her own, or to have at her command the productions of a domain comprising every range of climate between the temperate zones, and extending from the Vistula to the remote regions of Central Asia.’’ The Russian official journal published at Brussels, the Nord, contains the following letter from St. Petersburg, dated the 3d of April :— The conclusion of peace has given animation to business, but it appears that some miscalculations as to the effect of that | great event have been made.’ A telegraphic despateh from London has been received announcing that the prices of Russian produce had fallen in the London market, the English merchants doubtless fancying that in consequence of the war our warehouses are overstocked with produce, which the holders will be disposed to sell at half-price. In this calculation they are likely tobe much mistaken. In the first place, our produce has not been lying in our warehouses, as the accounts of the railways and the neutral ports can well testify, and the holders of what remains are in no way disposed to sell unless at a fair price. The Russian merchants have not in any respect been taken by surprise ; they had for sometime past foreseen what would oceur, and had not in consequence pressed sales, while the foreign purchasers have held back, hoping that concessions would eventually be made. The signature of peace has decided the matter in favour of the Russians. As soon a8 the signature was knowu in London the English houses, in order to kill two birds with one stone, lowered*the price of Russian produce which they had on hand, and at the same time sent orders to St. Petersburg for purchases. The decline, therefore, had no other obfect than to get rid of stock which had been held for some time atexorbitant prices, and whieh it was hoped, thanks to the electric telegraph, could be replaced at former rates. A mistake is also made ia regard to corn, if it be imagined that a large quantity can be delivered immediately. As far as gards the Baltic ports, only what is now there, which is not very cohsiderable, can be available, and orders sent into the interior cannot be executed until near the end of the summer from wantof conveyance. The southern ports may probably furnish more, but Lam informed, on good authority, that the “3 Rae anergy omen en . ~ weates It : | greater part has been already engaged for France. If England mpact, but It was also anact of statesmanship. Justice | should, howeyer, stand in need of corn, we shall be able, either was coneerued in it, and so was the tranquillity of the Em-| this aatamn or in the next spring, to furnish large quantit ic 3 pire, it is, of course, conceivable that circumstances may {ata lower price than she ean procure it from America. Tt uise which would justify the annulment of the bargain with | will he thes seen that our merchants have no need ty show iynooth. DPobitical contrac’s may be set aside on the seore | ? a . [ewes ; ; se of breach of faith. But wi.l Lord Derby and his followers | say that Ivcland and th Nj ie authorities of the Church of Keme | taave so far violated the Maynooth compact as to entitle us | to caren? The endowment of Maynooth found T[reland| ‘ ‘ e i , : . . { in chronic and baressuppressed rebellion. If that enlow- - —_ rE Te, : ° , ‘i wa ment is supersed d, it will be because it has made [reland} | a). nex eal Ya anid pited here ay Be ainctiete—2i- yu, peacean.e, anu United, snere may 2 auc uae th + mat let them be ascertained. Instead of announcing % : : vert ; ny , shennan ; any such intention, or disavowing it, the Tory lcaders abstain oo aft tau: ACL, ducements for a great political party to revise a great poli-| g ‘ on c — < ° = . | We are not particularly sorry at Mr. Spooner’s immediate ucecss. It will bring things to’an open issue. It will| compel “ the coming men” to declare themselves, The Bill | fur d'sendewing Maynooth, which now awaits its second read- | ing, wll unmask pretenders and waiters upon Providence. | it wil show whether there are men who will undertdke fc | zovern this great country on the principles of foxe’s Martyrs, | and with no other text-book than the platform harangues of'| ~ NeGhee and O'Sullivan. It will show what is in reserve! for us. Ignorant, stolid, unmeaning, unealculating bigotry | —the firm, relentless religionism of Cromwell, or Mahomet, | Calvin, who would sacrifice every social and political ne- | | ; or sessity for what it considers to be truth—the trath of pro- scription, exclusion, and persecution——this we can understand, | And this is what Mr. Spooner means. He thinks that | Catholic priests govern Lreland, and that Catholic priests ave | AD Armag dion and floods of blood are the | natural and fitting results of this view. If we believed that! the Devil wasin Dublin Castle, and that we could get rid of, | ! . a ant. Cnrist. iim by a civil warin Ireland, then of course, we should | lave no greater objection to war aguiust the Devil in propria? persona in Ireland than against Nicholas in the Crimea. | _And, reduced to common sense, thisis Mr. Spooner’s view. | ss 7 miPX’ a | Lord Bernard expresses it in so many words :—* This Sebas-| ‘topol of the Chu:c of Rome cun vo longer be allowed to) utterly razed.’’ Memembering what bloodshed and slaughter | that he understands himself. But if anything less than this | thuinsclvcs 200 eager to sell, and the proof of this is that prices have rather a tendency to advance than to decline. + -_> ITALY. We hear of presents made by the Sultan to the King of Sardinia, and of the good understanding subsisting between the two Governments; but harmony has less chance of being , 7 Ss L established in the same degree between Sardinia and Austria, if we may judge by the oceupation by Austrian troops of positions in the Duchy of Parma, contiguous to the Pidd- montese frontier. Pontremoli, a place of considerable im- portance, in particular, is one of those to which the imperial troops are adyauacing, at the request, it is added, of the Duchess of Parma. It is concluded that this is done in the evident intention of putting a check on Sardinia, which is supposed to entertain views on the Duchy of Parma, its froutier neighbour. In that case, the Duchess would be compensated by the Modenese States, the latter prince re- ceiving pecuniary iademnity; but Austria is reported to keep in the background some right ef reversion to Parma, which she would then bring forward. The importance of the news come to hand fiom those quarters is perhaps exagyerated, but it has revived reminiscences, and probably presages fresh difficulties. We understand that neither England nor Franee is dis- posed to zolerate apy menace against S.rdinia on the part of Austria. We rejoice to hear that, in the event of any hestile demonstration by Austria on the frontiers of Parma, a fleet of English and French men-of-war will probably immedi- ately appear in the Gulf of Spezzio. The moral effect of sych a demonstration would seriously compromise the safety of the Austrian domination, ee First Exexisn Bau rw rug Crivzs.—Last night (March 31), commencing at eight and terminating at two, a capital dance was given on board H. M.S. Bruiser, lying in Balaklava harbor, to commemorate the wedding-day of the Captain and his wife, was married on his birthday. During the last week great » | difference of opinion had been flying about, as to whether an “Sebastopol cost, we understand Lord Bernard, and we fear | differ eae ying ’ ‘¢eyening party ’’ could have been got up on account of the scarcity of ladies, and the distances on horseback that these is meant by the success of Mr. Spooner’s motion, we must | fay would have to come, in addition to which the weather was say that those who have permitted even its temporary success | have a great deal to answer for. They have raked up the | , embers of polemical hatred, only to embitter both parties, ‘and to satisfy neither. They have done something to stimu-| late ultra-Protestant expectations which they never mean to | fulfil. They have awakened heartburnings which even) subsequent liberality and honesty will fail to lay asleep; and they have provoked suspicions which will make the govern- ment of Ireland difficult.to all public men, but impossible to| ‘any who are suspected of conuivance at Mr. Spooncr’s bigotry and intolerance. 4 2ece RESULTS OF THE PEACE. Since the declaration of peace, the trade between Great | Britain and Russia is resuming its wonted channels, and a more | ‘than usual degree of activity is manifested by the merchants | ' of both countries to re-open those peaceful relations which had | broken off by the war. A London journal, in noticing the! eagerness manifested for the renewal of commercial transac: | | tions, Says : | «The boom of the cannon announcing the signature of the’ ' preliminaries of peace in Paris had not ceased to echo along the shores of the Baxtie: when the traders of Odessa re-opened | _ their warchouses, and invited customers for enormous cargoes ‘of grain. Rapid messages at the same time traversed the | 7 . . «1 = | frontiers the products of those harvests which had remained | undoing the wrong of centuries—having at length, with in-| I . . re . , i idly in the warehouses of the great landed proprietors. The finite difficulty, made Ireland industrious, loyal, and united | Hamburg Post-office was surcharged with letters, in which the | —it is rather hard for us to throw all this away for the great jest of seeing Spooner with his face ruddled and chalked, gud Newdegate playfully performing a somerset with the merchants of London, St. Petersburg and Riga, re-opened | : ; “a or invoicing eonsiguments. In Paris, the members of the Con- by no means warm, and during the day snow fell. The Bruiser | is a companion screw steamer to the Abundance. Both lying at the head of the harbor, and both being commissariat vessels, the former crushed the wheat, and the latter baked the bread. Between them they can turn out 18,000 lbs. of bread, daily, or 6600 3-lb. loaves. Among the company present at this dance, which numbered about eighty, I noticed Lady Frederick | Fitzroy, Mrs. White, Mr. Mrs. and Miss Drake, Mr. and Mrs. Brine, Major De Moleyns, Cap. Martin, Mr. and Mrs? Marzelli, Captain and Mrs, Handyside, &e¢. The 82d band was in atten- dance. At twelve o’clock the company sat down to a first-rate supper on the upper deck, which was beautifully arranged for the purpose. After the health of the Queen had becn given, with all the honors, that of the Emperor, Empress, and the Iinperial heir followed, and was duly responded to by Col. Louis, 97th Regiment. Commissary-General-in-Chicf, Mr. Brake, C. B., proposed Mr. and Mr. Comyn’s health ia a most happy speech. Florence Nightingale, the woman beloved of all men and all nations, for her noble humanity, has been Gazetted officially as Directress-General of all hospitals in the British dominions. No nurses can for the future be appointed in any public hos- pitals without her sanction. She has been ill from a fall, buat is quite recovered. +» os 2 The city of Cairo, the capital of Egypt, and one of the ois . “a 2 f a 'tnterior of Russia. summoning to the Danubian or Baltic) richest cities of the East, contains 409 mosques, 140 schools, } F ’ oO LL lazarettos, 300 public cisterns, 46 squares, 240 streets, from 500 to G00 alleys, as many passages, 1265 houses of refresh- ment, 1 hospita!, 65 baths, and from 25,000 to 30.000 donkeys, which are Jetout for hire. ‘These arfiinals are the only means : : lof ! e which it is possible to make use of in going _ their intercourse with old correspondents, transmitting orders, | of conveyanc P going from one part of the city to another, or in paying visits, r r ™ TUN Ey > hi = ee ~ - , ESE BA ah RE CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, MONDAY, MAY 26, 1856. No. 47, é MOON'S PHASES. — MAY, 1856. | famous and Rita thie asi ale Ch Se ae " cat aTaaE REA Me atin LT — ’ \ : i ar, , ; arles Lamb’s roast | ferences were beset with applications, urging them to hasten : ° New Moon 4th day, 10h. 3m morning. S. EF. he was unctuous eating; but even a roast pig would be dear the moment.when mercantile operations could be once more Colonial Legislature. First Quarter [th day, 4h. 6m. evening. S. EB. at the price if one was obliged to burn a house for the arack. established. British commerce is far more impatient than the | f Full Moon 1th day, 7h. i7m. evening. 8. E. ™ 3 MOUSE OF ASSEMBLY. Sarurpay, March 29, INCREASE OF REPRESENTATION AND AMEND. MENT OF THE ELECTLON LAWs, ( Concluded.) ifon. Mr, WHELAN said that a personal attack had been made upon him by an hon, member from Queen’s Count y (Mr. Laird) which he felt it his duty to notice. In bringing forward this measure, he had been told that he was influenced by private and selfish motives—that its main object was to secure his election by altering his own electoral district. Now this accusition was made in utter ignorance of the facts, and had nota particle of truth to rest upon. He had been about ten years in the House of Assembly, during which time he had run many elections, and was never once defeated, If the hon. member who made the attack could say as much for himself, he might speculate with some degree of assuranea regarding the elections of others. To show that he had no personal interest in tie proposed change in the Election Law, he contemplated detaching from his present district one of the best Townships it includes, viz. Lot Fifty five, where he had been always generously and almost unanimously supported —a township thickly settled, where he had many esteemed private as well as political frieuds, and whose support, in every contest, he was morally certain of obtaining. He did most sincerely regret that a necessity existed for detaching Lot 55 from the present Second District of King’s County ; but jit would be impossible to make the fourth district, which the new arrangement would require, without adding Lot 55 to that which is commonly called the Murray Harbour Dis- trict, and then splitting that district in two. " No other con« sideration would induce him to sanction the alteration, and even as it was, he felt that his friends on Lot 55 would be apt to complain of bis transferring them over to another district ; but he trusted that when the whole facts of the case were brought to their knowledge, they would not condewn the con- duct of one who would certainly regret the s@paration much more acutely than they themselves euld.° Wik regurd to the St. Peter’s portion of the district, he (Mr. W.) proposed to leave that as it was under the old Jaw; so that it might be easily seen that i.stead of gaining by the now arrangement, he would be losing a very large large number of his best supporters. There was some novelty, if no ingenuity, about the objections raised by the hen. member for Charlottetown (Mr. Palmer) to the proposed Measure. He suid it ought to have originated with the Government, but they being afraid to venture into deep water, did not like to incur the risk of bringing it forward ; yet, the hon. member contended, it should be con- 'sdered a Government measure, because it was brought in by @ person who reevives “ a large salary ” from the Govern- ment, Members on the other side were evidently very much distressed about his (Mr. W.’s) salary, as they were pleased to call it, when in fact there was no salary at all ; he received, like any other person doing work for the Government, payment for any specific services that might be rendered ; and because the services were numerous, expensive and laborious, the annual cost of them amounting to a considerable sum of money, the gentlemen in the opposition seemed to consider it necessary to remind the House of the fact at | least once every day-during the Session, _As to the Govern- ment being afraid to venture “into deep water"=that-is, afraid to bring forward this measure as a Cabinet question from fear of not being sustained, that was all nonsense. It would certainly be more likely to secure a majority in its favour then than it ecu'd when introduced as an open question ; and he (Mr. W.) would certainly not have brought it forward unless he knew there was a majority in its favor. Of course he was prepared for the opposition of the hon. member for Charlottetown. It would be a miracle if he did not oppose an extension of the people’s liberties in the way proposed, when he tried, a few years ago, under Sir Donald Campbell, to distroy them altogether by the notorious Franchise Bil] sent secretly to the British Parliament. That hon. member had reminded the House of the proportion of representation to population in Great Britain and Ireland, and also in Massachusetts, and other parts of the American Union, in order to ‘show that the people of this Island were more fully represented than their fellow subjects in Great Britain end Ireland, or their ne‘gibours in the States, But the comparison was absurd and untenable so far as the British Islands are concerned, because there they have a House of Commons of 650 members, and could not well increase their number—there a very high property qualifi- cation is required of the representative ; and in short, the circumstanees of an old couutry like Great Britain are so vastly different from what they are in an infant Colony, that comparisons, aiways said to be odious, become particularly so exist as a standing menace to Protestantism, and it must be| Mr. and Mrs. Comyn. It likewise so happens that Mr. Comyn | wien instituted in reference to them. Why, if we were to > \ j assimilate our representation to that of Great Britain and Ireland, instead of 24 members, we would not have two in the Assembly of this Colony. And as for Massachusetts, which was also cited for their edification, there are some dis- tricts in this Island, such as the first and second districts of Queen’s County, where there is a far greater number of inhabitants represented than can be fcund in any of the Massachusetts constituencies. That State, according to the hon. member, has one representative to every 3,000 inhabi- tants. Well, the first and second distiicts of Queen’s County have over 13,900 each, while only two members are returned ; | thus shewing that Massachusetts, an old, wealthy and popu- ‘lous State, has only about half the amount of population ithat we have. The third district of Queen’s County has also a larger population to each representative than that assigned to Massachusetts; so the comparison, with regard to that State, is entirely against the argument of the lon. menber, Viewing the mutter in all its bearings, there could be no doubt that an increase of members was necessary. The population, wealth and resources of the country were greatly on the increase; and a House of thirty members could never be said to be too Jarge: no Colony, he believed, had Jess; and it was obvious that with less no Governmeut could be successfully conducted. Hon. Mr. LONGWORTH moved to postpone the measure till that day six months. The hon. member, Mr. Whelan, had said the Bill would not come into operation for two years. Why not say at once, it is the law of the land, and let a dissolution take place? As to the argument about population, if that principle were adopted, Queen's County would be entitled to as many representatives as the other two Counties together. What Bills had the Govern- ment brought down? A magistrate’s manual, _ All the hon. member cared for was £30 or £40 for printing. He [EDITOR ax» PUBLISHER, ig | a 1 eo a AE ARR EME se a i hc hy 2 ties 9 pe “ se a sat Sant 2 ga cos, Eat ligt +: mailer apt