$5“ Privy Councilloer diode-thou.“ a July, at Hanover, to which city be m for an purpose of erforining an operation on an eye. of the Crown rmce. ; The Rev. Cannop Thirlwell, author of the History > of Greece, in Lardner‘s Cyclopedia, has been cm_ ted Bishop of St. David’s, vacant by the death of Dr. Jenkinson, the late BishOp. _ _ , Mr. Mackenzie is about to resign fi-om ill heelth’ . the Goveniment of Ceylon, where his parsimonious 3" habits made him most unpopular. . A company in the Rifle Brigade has fallen vacant by the death of Captain John Fry, which event oc- (curred in the Northampton lunatic asylum, on the , 19th instant. Captain Fry was a Waterloo officer. - ' nianofwarisalsocmisihgofi'the 603s: mtlhlanspert has just arrived With troops. Still it appears that the insurgents are no way inti- midated, and are sufiiciently strong to keep at bay the whole Egyptian force commanded by Pacha, a man ol'no energy or talent, seconded, it is said, by Soliinan Pacha. IRELAND. Mr. O’Connell has given a new title to the Na- tional Society for obtaining Justice for Ireland, by substituting “for obtaining Repeal of the Union: He has held two meetings in connexion With this topic, one at Rathmines, near Dublin, on Sunday, and the other in the Corn Exchange on Monday. DUBLIN, July 31,—The Repe ers had a great day—a regular' field-day at the Corn Exchange. The accession to their numbers Will send terror to the stoutest heart of the Sassenacli and the stranger. Fancy six pounds ten shillings from a number of matrons and spinsters, denizens of thc cIasSic pur- lieus of Mary’s-lane, alias Rag-fair—all havm Sign- ed as “ staunch Repealers”——de_termined to kiss the lips of none but Repealers—to listen to the address- es of none but those who will swear fealty to the re- Hurrah! for the women of Ire- liamentary reform, which should be adopted by the whole country and sanctioned by_ the legislature. Considering the moderation which Durham always displayed, the little care which he took to press his just claims to political importance, and his indiffer- ence to a popularity which certainly at one time gave him the power of seizmghpon the Premiership, he certainly has been a most ill—used and much cal- umniated man. There is no public man of the day who has been pursued with more ruthless virulence by the Tory party and the Tory press. 1" inding a dearth of topics of abuse in his publrcponduct, they have sought materials for den-action in_ the styleof his living, and the Times has .even criticised With grave censure the utensils of his kitchen. His em- bassy to Russia, our merchants, who are the best judges of such matters, think successful: his enemies saw that it was splendid; and although the splendour of an ambassador is, in such a country as Russia, an honour to his country, and although the cost was Lord Durham’s and not our’s, yet all that satire, ni- sinuations, direct charges, and importinent nnd most baseless questions could do, was put in action to annoy and ridicule him. His government in Canada was unsuccessful, ' because his personal enemies made it so. Already ,en] ofthe umon. is justice be'nw done hiiiiiii this respect. But a few laud! ' l ' days ago ‘hc fluke 0" “'ehh'gmh PUthIY WE’de Sir Samuel O’Mally is also become 'a Repea er . it in the House of Lords ; and Lord Durham’s cele- The mesh, 'of setmmfiun altogether being sounded brated report must remain, as long as the Canndiaii along with Repeal, am! that too by the .st beloved provinces retain any importance or interest, a monu- pastors” of the people: ,5 a mmgrkable “Sign of the ment ofliis industry, ability, and judgment. We do times,” connected Wm, the mlsgoverpmeut of'tlllS ‘ “01 ehvy Lord Brougham the trhhhl’h “’hwh he 01" country under the present incapable Ministry. The mi'md 0“ this occnSion over his absent enemy' Viceroy is imitating lhe Prem'er’ m "m canng “lme is also coilainlv true that France has not been a pelt! to this ar- Tha' Lord Durham “'33 0V” calc‘llflted for a l"? takes place so that on quarter-day there be no draw- mlgnmcut." ' I litical leader in England, we do not believe. lbs back on the salary. Hear the Pnegtg Father Hughes, _ LU“, BROUGH_‘M__,,Thcn a" t have“) say Is, that text temper was ‘00 “hhendh’g i he “’33 110‘ “hum” parish priest of Clarcinorris, qunilur :— _ press, and reel mail cannot loo strongly express, my deep re- enough, or subtle enough, to manage alarge party, “These are, my friends,” gnu] he u the propog- gret upon lllls occasion. and ‘0 echelhh‘e the continual sul’l’on or“ humermls tions which I shall undertake to demonstrate to you '"“ hwy Ofih‘lcl’ehdem lheh- Pel‘hhl’s the him”th thh‘ —tlicsc are the views which I intend and wish constitution may have rendered him less patient and deeply to impress on your judgments um! mhmones. temperate in manner than he would have been had But before I commence doing so, I feel it right and his temper been 1955 tried by bo‘my hilmems‘ "0“" my duty to protest in liminc against the doctrine eVer, these were little things which might detract which Mr. O’Connell is perpetually preaching and from his practical usefulness, but not trom his cha— inculcatihgflhd that is, that he shun my mart to, meter. We are speaking of Durham as an honest, 0,. seek for, a separation Q,- Irelamg from England. able) and COhSISlem Imbhc "hm, hm as a very great That doctrine, with proper qualifications, I don’t mm" or “a ‘1 fiFSt'm‘e statesmm" As sucn 19‘ "3 want to condemn or dissent from ; but to take it in honour his memory' the unlimited sense in which it proceeds from the lips of the Liberator is what no Irishman of common scnsc can am longer listen to. I must tell the Libera- tor that we vc got too much of that doctrmc, and that the time is come when such views of Irish politics are both ludi'aous and mischievous. Let it not be under- stood that I aiii desirous, or that any Irishman should be desirous, for a separation from England. What Ireland wants, and what she shall no longer do with— out, is a Parliament of her own—a repeal .of the union with England; and that cannot be achieved or accomplislwd except by separation, I fiel. convinced, as every other Irishman must, that a separalion would be a blessing for Ireland. . ' “But the third condition ( i. c., of a beneficnil uni- on}—that is, a desire or inclination to legislate fairly and justly for Ireland—is what a British Parlia- ment must for ever and for ever fail in, from the cruel and immitigable hatred which the Scotch and Eng- lish must for ever bear to the religion of Ireland, and that from a recollection of the injuries they have in- flicted for centuries on persons professing that reli- gion. I believe in my heart and soul, were all Ire- ‘land to-morrow to become Protestant, that there is not a section of the entire British empire that would be more fondly cherished. (Hear and cheers)” “ Organise at once,” quotli he, “ take care in that firm msu' no existing law, human or di- vine. Exhibit yourselves in the (lctenniuud attitude of millions of sober, cool, and well-united Irishman, resting the success of the cause on the support of Heaven, on the approbation of all the civilized countries of the world, on its own intrinsic justice ; but, above It has been Stated thht by an amendment hm'O' all, on your own moral powers, and exertions, and duced by the DU!” 01' Wellington into the Bill for energies, the rc-union of the Canadas, that the Act was not to “The last six years (he goes on to say) have been g0 Into operationuntil fifteen months after the Royal so many years of peace and unprecedented tranquil- assent had been giVeh t0 h—Whereasv in reality, the lity in Ireland, because they were year of hope and amendmhm only amounts ‘0 this’ that the Governor expectation that justice would be done to her ; but Gene!“ 19 empowered “’de the Act in force at' all these hopes and expectations are now disap- any "me he maybe Please ‘0 d0 50: “(h-hill fiheen pointed and frustrated ; and no one can be a stranger mhhlhs “he? the dale 0“ “8 final enactment. This to what mnan disalfioinzcd hopes my rewrt to fl),- materially alters the view of the case. We learn, THE REV. ROBERT NEWTON. From the Philadelphia Saturday Emma’s Post. we extract the following ObVSBI'VathnS on the pulpit to 'ofthe Rev. Robert I ewton :— w?‘ Vac do not know whether the Rohert New- ton may be taken as a fair representative 'ot the pecu- liar style of eloquence most popular in_ England; but if he may, we do. not hesuate to aSSIgn to her, what she has long claimed for herself, the character of the most civilised nation on the lobe. He reminds us of what has come down to e modems of the speeches of Demosthenes, wanting, it is true, much of his polish, his fire, his impetuo‘sity, but resembling him in most of the leading characteristics of style. If anything, however, he is more arguinentatrve. But a few words on the appearance and elocution l~ .. of Mr. Newton, before we pass to the discussmn of ‘ :92" I his style—“The Rev. Mr. Newton is no bad repre- / ' sentative of his nation, so far as air and figure are concerned. Tall—with well-knit frame, a short neck, broad shoulders, a florid countenance, ands. large and messy head, no one could oss him in a. crowd without being convinced of us English paternity. We mean no disrespect, but rather a compliment to him, when we say he is the very im rsonation of John Bull. His ineiu is erect, an in the pulpit, noble. He has none of that ‘ demissa vultus’ of which Sallust speaks, and which dis ces too many of our orators, but he glances " bold; and fearlesl around upon his hearers,_like a man conscious of his superiority, and determined to assert it...-.......The elocution of the rev. divine is, for some moments alter opening his exordiuin, pe— culiarly plain. He does not appear as yet to at home in his theme, and thou h he cannot be said to labour, he does not dazile. 'othing, however, can revent his listeners from admiring the richness of is voice, whose every word is music, and whose lower tones especially we have never heard sur- passed. Its compass is almost unequalled. ow ringing out clear and silvery—now mellowed into the softest music—and new sinking into a deep, rolling, sonorous buss, it fits itselfto every variety of feeling the speaker may wish to arouse. That it is sometimes shrill, and often grating, is only a proof; like the occasional drawling ot the orator, that perfection is attainable rarely, and perhaps mun—“When, howeVer, the speaker advances t. further into his discourse, and begins to grow ex- cited with his theme, all that formerly pleased or disappointed us in his elocution, is forgotten in ad- miration at the masterl style in which he begins to develope his subject. itli a mind keen and pene— trating—a capability of detecting the strong points of the argument at once—a power of generalisation rarely excelled—a flow of words at once copious, choice, and nervous—a faculty of dilating on an argument at length, and then condensing all into one compact sentence—and a fervid, rapid style of speaking, affecting no ornament, but striking home at once to the reason, and though sometimes tinged with declamation, taking its general hue from logic, he exerts a power over the minds of his audience which neither a glowing fancy, a finer clocution, or , a inore brilliant style could exert. He is, in fact, of the school of Fox, rather than that of Burke, and disdaining all needless ornament, is simple even to severity. Not a siinile, not a metaphor, not a pictu- resque deseription, not a poetical thought of any ' kin Whatever, is found in the whole range of his t ‘ neral. discourse. He seems to have but one aim View, to convince-his audience: on that he fixes ' eye; to it he addresses every nerve, and like the ,t Greek in the race, he casts ofi‘every thing t' Funpede his progress, regardless ofall, if he _ ply win the goal. Sometimes coarse, and . 0 n careless, but always nervous, rapid, and lo icol, r ' he drags his audience along with him by main orce, ‘1 as ~i e disdained more gentle means. However much, at first, we may question his argument, he never leaves it until he has fastened conviction upon ' us, seeming to play around the subject for a while, ;, ,but at last flashing the truth upon us in a single ~ ' lightning—like scntence.............The gestures of the reverend divine, in his moments ofexcitemcnt, are somewhat theatrical. They are often violent in the extreme, and consequently neither graceful nor effective. But this is a rare occurrence, and it is better to err on the side of too much vehemence, than 'on that of too little. * * * We cannot HOUSE OF LORDS,Jqu 30, Lord S'riuimronn, referring to statements in the of this country and France, that a diplomatic artangcnieiit had been concluded between this country and certain great Conu- ncnml powers, for the ammo of settling the question at issue between Turkey and gypt, and that lranee was not a con- senting‘ nor a signing party to that arrangement, Wished to learn the simple fact of its existence or non-existence. ' Lonn MELBOURNE said it was certainly true that negocia- tions had been l'al’l‘led on between Great Britain, Austria, sia, Prussia, and the Sublime l'orte, for the purpose of pan! - iiig matters in the Levant. Matters of this kind could not considered as settled and perfected until they wore ratified. LORD BROUGHAM asked whethci it was true or not that no communication whatever was mtide to France, or to re- presenting France, upon th'o subject ol those pageant-om, or this treaty—if a treaty had indeed been entered trite—until aflcr the period ofits completion. In short, whether ll wag true “I. all communication was withheld iromT’tlie representative of lb. 'rench oreinment u on the suh'ect F1.0niithLaouasii’anwcredi-I‘ It has certinly been all ways our wish to concur with France upon lhiLsul'g'ecL; but it v‘ _ \ - Tun ©©JL®NEAE4 EIEEZAEAIDo SflTURDJKAUGUST a), 1840. The papers received by yesterday’s post are en. tirely destitute of interest. After the most careful perusal, we are unable to extract one micle of marked novelty from one of them. From our files, however, which we last week received by the Aca- dia, we have made such selections’as we trust will prove both interesting and profitable. The Royal Mail Steamship flcadia, Capt. Miller, arrived at Boston, on the 17th inst. in 35 hours from Halititx, and 12 days and 17 hours from Liverpool, G. B., being the shortest passage ever math to the United States ! The Preridml, steamer, which sail- ed from Liverpool three days previous to the Ace-t dia, had not arrived at New York on Sunday the the 16th instant. ' The mail for England, by the flcadia, Steamer,- will he closed at Halifax, on Thursday, the 3d Sep~ tember, at 3 o’clock in the afternoon. ' FOuITIcs AND NEWS. FOREIGN. . SULPHUR Qossriox.—Iii the French Chamber of I’eers M. Thiers has stated, the mediation of France between Great Britain and Naples had been suc- cessful, and that on the previous day the differences were finally concluded, and the arrangement receiv- ed the signatures of the British and Neapolitan Ain- bassadors. By this arrangement, which is in the form ot'a new treaty, the sulphur trade is declared free, but a reasonable indemnity has been granted to the _ Company previously in the enjoyment of the monopoly. Sioux—The Paris papers and private let- ters confirm the news of the fall of Berga, and the arrival of Cabrera in France with 5000 men. The question now appears to be, what is to be done with the 8000 men who have thrown themselves on the protection of France? It has been stated that they are to be drafted into the Foreign Legion at Algiers. The Spanish Government has, it appears, called upon the French Government to give up the leaders ofthe troops that have entered the French territory, but such a demand cannot of course. chmnlied with. Dulumseda is aprisonor in Paris, at is treat- ed with the respect due to his rank. He talks very largely of what he would have done had he been in Cabrera’s place; but this is mere Spanish gaseou- adc, of the value of which the British troops have already had abundant experience. ALEXANDRIA, June lit—On the 16th inst, at noon, Sami Bey, Meheiiiet Ali’s private secretary, embarked in the Tuscan steam boat Hajji Baba for Constantinople, with instructions I) induce the Porte to a speedy conclusion of pcacc. From the accounts which Mehemet Ali has received from Constantino- ple, he has no doubt that his demands will be acco- ded to ; in this case Sami Boy is to make an offer to FIVE PIRATES Sno'r.—Havuna, 23d July.—Yes- terday were shot on the Mole, Francis Dennis, alias David Francis Laores, John de Armes, Juan Romeo, natives of the Canary Islands; Augustin Lopez, alias San Martin, a native of Portu ; and Lorenzo Fer- nandez, a native of Porto Rico; convicted of the crime of piracy by the Marine Court, and the sen- tence being approved of by his Excellency the Governor of this Island. (These are the culprits which were published in the Bulletin at the time, as having captured the brig Vernon, on her voyage from Falmouth, J ' to Halifax, and who murdered Capt. Cunningham and severilil) sailors, plundered the cargo and burned the vesse . dismiss the subject without expressing our pleasure the Sultan to place the son of Ibrahim Pasha at the redress." from a gentleman recently arrived from Quebec, with the peculiarly practical nature at the reverend head of an army of 50,000 men at his disposal, and And thus does he wind up this seditious ha- that the measure of re-union is extremely unpopular divme’s discourses. Fine sentences, lofty meta- to assure him that the Turkish fleet and his own m,,gue,_ in Lower Canada, not only among the French, but _ pliers, and touching pathos, may for a time obtain g admirers, biii it is only solid thought, and unanswer- able logic, which is, at last, to convince mankind. To do this, Mr. Newton seems peculiarly fitted. His eloquence is close, vehement, and irresistible; were ready to sail to Constantinople at the first no— tice. Saiiii Bey has, taken 50,000 dollars in ready money. Aii expedition against Syria is preparing. It consists of seventeen ships, with 12,000 men, un- der the command of Abbas Paclia, Mehemct Ali’s “As far as our influence (the influence of the R0- misli clergy) may go, it will be our sxcnnn DUTY that the voice of O’Connell, in the repeal question, SHALL BE IMPLICITLY osnvnn.” Three Ribbonmen, named Hickey, among the British part of the population. We never greatly admired the wisdom of the policy which dictated the measure, and if it is found to work well we must confess » that we shall be agreeably disapu Kennedy, and pointed—but nous verronsj! but we cannot better characterise it than by saying it is like his figure-aunt: LORD DURHAM. (From the London Atlas.) A politician’s consistenc and worth cannot be estimated while he is yet a ive. The Earl of Dur- ham is now beyond the pdssibility of forfeiting the character he bore, or of discarding the sentiments which he held. He has died as he lived, an upright and unchanging public man. Of all the men who now plav prominent parts upon the political stage, we could point out but very few whose career can even yet be reviewed with so much unvarying approval as the survivors of Lord Durham can review his. In the events of his pub- lic life we meet with much to regret but nothing to condemn. His course throughout has been that of a high spirited, honest, fearless, upright gentleman. Straitforward and unswerving, stained by no tortuous ambition, disgraced by no low intrigue, guilty of no cravmg afier power, and tainted by no suspicion of courtin by unworthy arts the popular applause, the films 0 the first Earl of Durham is bri ht and un- tarnished. , It will descend to the Lam tons as an hereditary honour more lustrous than their earldom ; a model and an ornament to those of his descendants who may be worthy, and a reproach to those who ma degenerate from their upright ancestor. rd Durham never had but one set of principles. He wore them in his early youth, and thev were as fi’esh as ever when he died. Acceding to ilie \Vhig party at a time when it had lost its ablest leaders, and was contending with weak minorities against the fatal policy of Castlereagh, Lambton’s name is to be found registered as an opponent of every act which has since then either been repealed at the command'of the people, or which still survives as a curse to the country. The despotic tendency of our fore policy, the corn law of 1815, which is still the giant grievance of 1840, the iniquitous six acts, In all met with the most strenuous opposition of Mr. Lainbton; and _in 1821, while parliamentary reform was a standard. joke for Tory simpletons to sneer at, he had the courage .to ring forward a measure founded upon the old Whig principles of household suffrage and triennial Parliaments. . The number that supported him was so small as to leave_him,without hope: yet, nine years later, he himself one of three Cabinet ministers com- nusnoned to make perfect a large measure of P - grandson, and governor of Cairo; it is to sail to- morrow morning for Beyroot. \Vhen Mehenict heard at Cairo of the breaking out of a new insur- rection in Syria, he wrote a long letter to Emir Bas- chir, in which he asked him the reason of it. “ Ifi” said he, “ the insurrection is caused only by the cir- cumstance that Ibrahim Pasha has required the Druses to deliver up their arms, that originates in a mistake. I never gave my son authority to take back from the Druses the arms that had been dis- tributed among them, but if they revolt because they will not pay the lawful taxes, I assure you that I my- self will come upon you with 100,000 men ; I will drive your mountaineers across the frontier. You know me, at all events. I send my grandson Abbas Paclia to Syria, with whom you have now to make arrangements.” Emir Buschir replied that he an- swered for the Druses, who have, in fact, submitted. —.dllgemeinc Zcitung'. SYRIA.—BEIROUT, July 3, 1840.—Every day the troops march from the town to support the Alba- nians in their attacks upon the insurgents close to us. and as readily come back repulsed. Beirout being placed en etat siege by Soliman Pacha, it is impossible to obtain any correct account for the moment from the insurgent camp. At Mirge, on the other side of Lebanon, a post cavass from Damascus saw, under Osman Pacha’s command, about 5000 men, com osed of infantry, artillery, and a small body of cav ry. We have accounts of two engagements near Zalili betwixt the insurgents and Osman Pacha. According to these, in the first Osman Pacha was defeated, in the second he claims the advantage, but the news comes through Soliman Paclia. The same post saw in the insurgent camp four Egyptian deserters. ‘ Abbas Pacha is here with 14 sail of Turkish and Egyptian ship's (one two decker, Turkish, eight fri- gates, Turkis .) In all we have about 13,000 men, Egyptians, Turks and Albanians, in the town and zaretto. On our way from Egypt to Beirout, a part of the crew of a Turkish ship, No. 3, tried to steer for Constantinople, but were overpowered. The men Were tried for the attempt by a council of war, and condemned to death. Owing to the s irit of revolt, the dare not execute them 0 n1 . were private v drowned two nights agdie y I bay The Emir Bechir still clings to the Viceroy appao. rently, but his influence seems null. Her Majesty’s steamvessel W has just come in. Byrne, were convicted of Whiteboyisni yesterday at the Nenagh Assizes. to bring forward the harvest ; the markets are fall- ing proportionately. \Vlicat fell 1s. per barrel at market to-day; oats dull. second quality, 9d. which sailed from Falmouth on the last, for New South \Vales, with Frost, Jones, and \Villiains on board, arrived at Simon’s Bay, Cape of Good Hope, April information was given that it was the intention of the convicts to take forcible possession of the Mandarin, iilzlimed John Black, was to take the command of the 5 ip. bolical plot. one of the largest, if not the very largest collection of newspapers possessed by They are in number more than 5000, and consist of files and specimens of the newspapers of every country, Whether now published, period. Some of them are more than a century old, and, when compared with the broad sheets of the present day, these specimens are the first and only numbers or short files of journals which were continued at Tripoli, does, Sandwich Islands, &c. &c. lished in all the Russia, Spanish, dish, Italian, Danish, Maltese, Modern Greek, Ben- alee, 81c. ; but the largest proportion are in the ting up of many have been collected with much time, trouble and expense, m furtherance of the work on the “His- tory and Statistics Simmonds is engaged. The Trustees of the British Museum have deemed the collection so valuable, that they have entered, we understand, into arrange- ments for their final transfer to the ry. As Mr. Simmonds is still pursuing his task and prosecuting his researches in this wide field of ephemeral literature, tamed a most rare and.unparalleled mass of news papers, and a vast Which Will wander the volumes on which he is en- Tlie weather is everything that can be wished for The Mandarin, convict ship, Captain Muddle, 28th of February on the 4th of May. On the 30th of and carry her to America ; and a convict One of the guards was concerned in the dia- Mr. P. L. Simmonds, of Chichester, Sussex, has any one individual. or at any former sink into utter insignificance. Many of attempted but not Malta, Lisbon, Jamaica, Barba- Tliey are pub- principal languages of Europe— German, French, Portuguese, Swe- nglish language. The size, type, paper, and get- are exceedingly curious. They of Newspapers,” on which Mr. Museum Libra- he will eventually have ob- body of singular information, tion which had been presented some time ago from the 701d Ddlcmlicrsl of the House of Assembly of Prince sun , com ainin of the exceedin l un'ust and o ressive- Four-pound loaf, 10d. ; 0{ IP g y J W '1 heir case was one which in an especial degree entitled them- to the attention and consideration of lioiicis were for the most part agriculturists, and their situation. was rendered extremely irksome by the lat e upon them. he them in thinking the house would address the be put to the grievance of which they in the House of Commons on the occasion re to. Lord John Russell is was anxious for a compromise, ther Session to be able to effect this.” the nature of the “compromise” ship here alludes? Is it unreasonable to suppose~ that it will be on the principle contained in the Bill‘ which was passed by Session, but re authorize the regulate the Island,” Her Majesty’s Ministers, together with an Address fi‘om the House of Assembly to the Queen, praying.- . that, for the peace and prosperity of the inhabitants of the Colony, Her Majesty “ pleased to recommend the adoption of such a prin-- “ ciple, “ the said Bill.” Ifthis supposition is incorrect, and we see no .reason to suppose that it is, we are une- le to conjecture upon what other principle any kind of a conipromise' lVaiter and Searcher Landing and Tide Surveyor at Hamilton, Bermudi- Honsn or Commons, July 13. Mr. Hume said that he wished to remind the house ofa peti- Speaker dward.‘ icrution o the tenure by which lan it were heldin that col0iiy.. Parliament. The ti- demands made concurred with' reasonable they should hope, that Queen, praying that an and might complained. Lord John Russell said that formerly large and improvident The petitioners hoped, and it was most grants of land had been made on condition that a certain num- ber of emigrants would proceed to which arrangements never had As the noble lord turned away rather an undertone, he was not stood him to say that in the next session of Parliament he- hoped that something might be the colony and occupy them, been carried fully into effect» from the gallery and spoke in. distinctly heard, but we under- done. The above is the Times’s report of What took lace fgrred‘ paper which we have seen, reported to have said—“ he and hoped by anoo . What can be- to which his Lord—~ In another London the House of Assembly last’ ected by the Legislative Council, “to: rown to purchase the lands, and to- settlement of the inhabitants of this: a copy of which Bill was transmitted to. “would be graciously or of a similar measure as that contained in can be accomplished. H. M. Customs—John L. Hurdis, Esq; Landin at this Port, has been~appointe The following replies have been received to a lie cations made to the Governor General and Sir ohn Harvey, respectively, soliciting their assistance in gaged exceedingly furthering interesting and useful. this Island the objects of the layiilist Committee h ‘ I ‘2 hid.