" ' e, fibefiolotfiat .mcraw. g - a I _, ,, Glasgow. The, fourth is tliat‘ of M ed Dr. Thomson in the editorship of , v and who has-been ever the consist . :- fix,“ I advocate of religious and civil rights. ‘The fin}, a minister whose name has been long and intimately ed with exertions for the promotion of religion 1,2, , The sixth is that ofunotber clergyman, still mot. " ' iu the North. The seventh is Dr. Chalmers, ’ will be remembered with. unnlloyed respcet’léyhfi I Judges of whose decisions we complain, with on' r- x exception, will be utterly forgottem—a man who“ occupy pages in books written long years hence,’ legislators whose tyrannical conduct .we exceptions, will not have their names inscribed o y‘ of a single work. We need not, limvever,~ pan; the names on a list, with the object of showin tual weight, which contains those ofDr.I{eith, w], I on Prophecy have been "sold to a greater ektent thqn come must have been neéessarily augmented by probably 0“: Ilinlr'had abandoned politics, even _the honours of my profession and its highest stations lay fairly before me. “But I dreamed a day-dream—was it a‘dream ?——_that Ireland still wanted me; that although the Catholic aristo- cracy and gentry of Ireland had obtained most valuable ad- vantages from emancipation, 'et the benefits ofgood go- vernment had not reached the great mass of .the Irish people, and could not reach them, unless the Union should be either made a reality, or unless that hideous measure should be abrogated. “ I did not hesitate as to my course. My former success gave the personal advantages which no other man cotild easily procure. 1 flung away the profession-TI gave its emol- uments to the winds—J closed the Vista of its honours and dignities—I embraced the cause ofiiiy country; and—come wool or come woe—I have made a choice at which I have My only reason for-waitingupon the Lord Mayor was to assist his lordshi with any information in my power re- specting Prince ‘ ward Island. Your report at tlie’ Man- sion,Hotise makes me say one or two things that I did not. 'Will you oblige me‘by correcting the errors in any way you like.—Your obedient servant, Edmonton, Nov. 2. HENRY VVRIGIIT. » As to-morrow's mail takes out your paper to the Island, perhaps you will at once do the handful. I Mr. Wright did not say that the emigrants would have to travel over200 miles of nearly impassable country. He stated that they would have to proceed 200 miles to Further Extracts from lists English Papers; BRITISH noicrn AnERiCAN ASSOCIATION. ' A (From the Times, October 28.) _, ‘Among the variety of schemes which now-a-dsy's com- ; monly combine men togetberfor the purpose of speculating fin philapthropy and trading in the misery of their fellows, ;t conspicuous place has lately been assumed by a society ‘ldenom'mating itself “ The British American Association for l 'Emigration and Colonization.” Most magnificent are the . . 1 titles, and truly paternal) are the professions, of this most that part of New Brunswick opposite Prince Edward Island, .,,di3interested body. Its object is to renovate British America and then drag a boat across nine Bill“ Of 10° ‘0 the "by Scotch Baronets. “ That order was originally created,” island. . _ V it seems,’ “to further the settlement of British North Ame- He did not agree With what had been l’reVlOl'Sly §lflled_ “deaf and by that “order,” therefore, and that order respecting the climate, except as itaflected the question‘ot -8lone, Is this society has at length discovered, is it likely emigrants proceeding thither -at this tune of year, the in- ., that any successful American emigration can be conducted. ' The company, Thirty-four Scotch Baronets are accordingly minted in the prospectus, who are to exercise, we are told, “ a careful su- “psrvisio'n over all the interests, not only of the shareholders, “but more especially of the emigrants confided to their “care.” Besides the paternal baroncts, the society numbers among its palrii partake the names of a long list of Scottish nobleman, of£1900,000 in capital, and ofthe Duke of An— 9153, its tutelary genius. And, not to be without a charac- ter for long-sighted disinterestedncss, the end and aim of “object, and to render the most important advantages to the “community.” With this overpmveriiig stoek-in-trade the association professes to commence business. ' The companmkindly undertakes to risk the little modicum of independence and customer sacrifices, for the sake of the speculation; and, with equal good-nature, promises to participate, “ for the be- . “uefit ofthe shareholders,” in any profits which that venture may? realize, and—to leave him to bear any loss. For car- rying out this commercial enterprise, it rather novel mode .ot’advertising, and that without expense, has been hit upoh. the body corporate, “the child of the Duke ofAnuxbs,” with all his baroncts and philanthropy, has been bodil before the Loan MAYOR. He went there, as be said, to “ all lenge” would “operate as a gcod mlvcrtiseincn‘t.” We hope so too; most “challenges” do so operate; but the result is not generally to the advantage ofthe pugnacious challenger --if he happen to come ofi'second best. In the present iii- stance, as we shall see, “inquiry” had the best of- it. . It appears that either the long string of names which were appended to the association, or the paper million of “puuds Scots,” or the benevolence of the baronets, aided by other more questionable proceedings, which we shall shortly explain, induced several persons, all of whom appear to_ have been in a state of very sufficient independence here —some earning as much as £2 per Week—to listen to the seductive tales oftliis “association,” and to sacrifice their pects for the sake of the golden harvests of British mh America. Unhappily, however, for itself, but fortn- nater for the intended emigrants, the association was not able even to get so far in its speculation as to ship ofl'its .victims. The contracts with the emigrants were violated in the outset; and the Association, with all its humanity and appendages, was brought up on a charge of swindling. The culprit was on Monday remanded until Wednesday, but the following any suspicious looking facts came out in evidence :— A Mr. Harmon was employed, or took upon himself—for it was not intended that he should be fixed with agency—to contract with mechanics and other fit persons who \vere earning a comfortable competence here, to go out to Prince Edward Island, on the strength of being employed on their arrival by the association at much higher rates of wages than they earned here, and on the faith that they would otherwise realize great advantages. Now, in all cases. this ‘Mr. Eamon virtually represented himself, or at least acted so that he was believedto be, the authorized agent of the association ;—he carefully avoided actually committing the association; he made out the agreements (when there were any) in his own name only, and not in that of the company; and, finally, the company disowncd him and his agree - merits, when complaints were made of their violation. JOHN BLACKMAN, an iron-moulder, wholiad been engaged to go to Prince Edward Island by Mr. IIALDON, deposed, that he was promised £3 a week for three years by the asso- ciation. and to have the liberty to reside in tbe~lsland, in which he was to have five acres offrecliold land, at £1 per - acre. ' “The Loni) Maven—Did yoti consider you were going out for Mr. Harmon or the association? I “Bucxiiun said, he thought he was going for the associa- “The Loitn Maroa (having looked at some papers hahtlcd to him) said, that BLacxuau’s contract certainly was with ii 2'. HALDON.” Now, the solicitor for the association admitted that the vessel in which these emigrants were to have sailed was the property ol the company, and had been prepared by the company for that p rpose; it was admitted that the asso- cmtion was ready (1 l willing to carry out iilarge number ofeuugrauts to Prince Edward Island, on the most improved principles, just at the very time that this Mr. llamas was gomg about “engaging” people to go. The solicitor de- clared, °‘ that the vessel fitting out was one ofthe most per- “fect, in the opinion of the Government, and supplied with “ everything for the comfort of the emigrants.” And yet, notwithstanding all this care about the emigrants, we are told, in the next sentence, that “the association had nothing “to do with the emigrants going out—Mr. Hannon enwaned “ them.” We must say, that the coincidence is verv refinlark- able. This shuffling and double dealing through 'Mr. 11:“.— non—adopting his engagements so long as they were conve- nient, and making him the ’scapegoat if they 'became trou- blesome—is certainly most exceedineg suspicious. Nor are matters much mended when we look into the way In which Mr. IIALDON conducted his negotiations. In one can he refused any agreement in writing, but “announ- “_ced that he would abide by what appeared in print”——the circular of the association, we presume. And afterwards he was “anxious that the witness should go without any agree- “ mm: at all.” But this was relitsed. ° Mr. I'IALDON’S promises, too, ot‘which the association were not backward to take advantage, were of the most magnifi- cent description. He gave the witness BLACKMAN “navery “good account of Prince Edward Island, and said that ho “mighbimflce hisfortune there.” And be added, that tliqland was “like that of'Glocestersbire or Worcestershire” (beauti- gu'l;yac;munistnutial) “ and would grow anything that was sown . Now, many ofthese poor men had given up wood situa- tions for the sake of these offers, and were literaIly kept for weeks without a shilling, waiting for their fulfilment. The result is, that the company, on being brought up for swind- ling, but not till then, disown their agent. llis neuotiations had been so conveniently and widely conductedaas not to implicate his principals; and his promises so ambiguonsly large, that neither he nor the company could be blamed on their failure. Ifthese are not badges of fraud, we do not know what is. “Bolus total.“ in generalibna” is an old and a true legal maxim; but this is what the “British-American “_ Colonization and Emigration Association" call an adver- tisement.- We hope that emigrants will read and take warn~ log by it. i (From the London Morning Herald, Alba. 3.) Batman Ausnicas Assocunon.—_—A long printed report of‘tospecial meeting ofthe Consulting Council” of this As- sociatiou, held on Monday last, the Marquis ofDownshire in the chair, has been forwarded to us, but as we only publish reports furnished by our own reporters, and as a reporter from. [he was refused admission to the meeting, we dechne givmg this document insert-ion in our columns. ' To the Editor of the London .Morning Herald. 3,3,...1 consider it rather unpleasant. to appear in print at all—very much so as stating what is untrue, habitants ofthat part ofthe world not being accustomed to wear warmer clothing during their winter, than we do during ours, owing to the dryness ol the atmosphere. , served upon the dcsirableness of admitting the French p0- theso emigration-mongers is, “to accomplish a vast public pulation ofLowcr Canada to a larger'sb'are iii the govern- ment of that colony than has been hitherto conceded them. Many circumstances recommend such a colirse. simple and honest char’hcter—tbeir mere numerical import- ance—their indisposition to the alliance ofour encroaching - neighbours of the United States—all assert, that no man ever made greater sacrifiCeS to what be deemed the cause of his country than not how I may be ridiculed or maligned. the late Act ol'Uniou OHS-10, unpopular as it consciousness that no public man has made more, or more ready sacrifices.” comfort at home which its emigrant and untrustworthy ‘ . . ~ these circumstances point them out as fit recipients of a share, and ence. at first was with them, conferred on a body of people not, disposed to the llritisb protection, but still fermenting from the effects of late popular excitement, a preponderance in the popular nsseiiibly ofCanadn. theory of a responsible government was established. The allenge inquiry ;” and he hoped that his “chal- il‘esqlt may prove nllSlilclous; ies . new order of things that the Governor is compelled to call to his councils, on their own terms, men who have lately been proscribed, or in prison; and that the choice ofindi- viduals is justified upon the ground that the leaders of the , French party, scrape, and that ifony influential Freucliiiian at all is now to aid in the government of Canada, it must necessarily be one of those who were back. The outset is unfortunate; not, we believe, from the “mum,” discovery of the fact, that Needing at me nose ' fault of Sir Charles liagot, or the present government, lint from the intliscretion of those who have precipitated this revolution, who have left to tween so perilous a risk as (telling us, with some admixture of contempt, that, however Nov. 2 (From the London Time .) Pom'ricn. CHANGES IN CANADA.—\Vc have already ob- a substantial one, ofpoliiiral power and influ- This, lias at once given them. That Act we believe, at heart, iii- Not only this; but the we are willing to hope the But it is a somewhat ominous consequence ofthis now predominant, were all in the same traitors or suspected a few years their successors no choice be- stitiitioti, and supporting that suspension by the bayouets of the British soldiery, and the physical energy of the traction of the inhabitants. \Ve are told, that by these concessions the affections ofthe French are for ever bound to the Bri- tish government, and that our troops may be withdrawn from Canada with no longer delay than is necessary to find room for them in England. Such is usually the language of those who are gaining their point. The momentary popu- larity may indeed be the attendant upon a bold and well- tiined policy, but it may be weak and imprudent concession. must decide. Two remarks only we would venture before (amount maewed pm. me convcvance 0f passengers and l,,,,._ . eels, and for the po<tage, by each Bmw'ee" “'9 Ellgllfll' laiiiount received for thc’same iii the ral packets, after the amounts received for passengers and postage, 81m.” This return has been recently published, and by that, ofthe five steamers between Liverpool and Kingstown. concluding. One is this—that the present arrangements offer little prospect of permanence. ultra Reforinei's and the French colonists there is no reii community ofinterest or principle. The patriarchal habits ofthe latter, their uneiiterpi‘ising though industrious cha- racters, their prejudices, simplicity, and native refinement of» feeling, render them no natural allies ofthe active, pusl'iing, independent money-making English Radical ; and‘any con- tinued union between two such parties, however‘possible in the loose warfare of opposition, can neither be hoped or feared from them when engaged. in the practical detnils‘of legislation and administration. The present coalition is a mere transition state; we shall have another shuffling of the cards before We can tell what is to turn tip for Canada. Secondly, if we did not look fort 'ard to this second break- ing up of parties, our expectations would be more gloomy than they are. Already, from within the Governor’s Cabinet, we hear sentiments broached of no favourable nature to Bri- tishsupremacy—iiitimations,ifwe rightly understand them, ofdoubt whether the Act ofthe Imperial Legislature is con- clusivcly binding on the colonies, without the additional sanc- tion ofthe colonial ratification. Ifthis is to be the tone ofthe coalition, speedy belits diSSolution; for such a spiritudminister- ing the affairs of the colony, on the principle now apparently conceded of“ responsible,” that is, in fact, independent, local government, .would be indeed a dangerous enemy to the Home authority ; as the shrewd Yankee press basfound out, generous, however worthy ol'a new era in Government, that principle may be, it is palpany at variance with the laws of colonial empire, and must disable us from holding that eni- pire together one year after it has ceased to be supported by the most palpable and present coincidence ofintercsts. MR. O'CONNELL—AND Till". “ RENT.” ( From the London Watchman.) Aswe would do justice to our bitterest political opponent, we give the following passages from a reply of Mr. O’Con— ‘ 'iiell to an attack upon him by Lord Shrewsbury, (also a Roman Catliolic,)for accepting the annual subscription from his countrymen; usually denominated the “rent:” “I will not consent that my claim to “the rent” should be misunderstood. That claim may be rejected; but it is tin- derstood in Ireland; and it shall not be‘misstated anywhere without refutation. “My claim is this. For more than twenty years before Emancipation, the burden of the cause was thrown upon me. I had to arrange the meetings—prepare the resolutions —-to furnish replies to the correspondence—to examine the case ofeach person complaining of practical grievances—to rouse the torpid—to animate the lukewarm—to contronl the Violent and iiiflaiiiinatory'-to avoid the shoals and breakers oi tlielaw—to guard against 'iiultiplicd treachery—and at all times to oppose, at every peril, the powerful and multi- tudinous enemies to the cause. “To descend to particulars. At a period when my minutes cotiiited by the guinea; when my emoluments were limited only by the extent of my physical and wakino‘ powers; when my meals were shortened to the narrowest 5space, and my sleep restricted to the earliest hours before dawn ' at that period, and for more than twenty years, there was, no day that 1 did not devote from one to two hours, often much ‘moi‘e, to the working out ofthe Catholic cause. And that without renewing or allowing the offer ofany remunera- tion, even for the personal expenditure incurred in the ani- tation of the cause itselil For four yearsI bore the smile expenses. of the Catholic agitation, without receiviin the contributions ofothers to a greater amount than £74 in the whole. Who shall repay me for the years ofmv buoyant youth and cheerful manhood? Who shall repay inc for the lost opportunities of acquiring professional celebrity or the wealth which such distinctions would ensure 9 l “ Other honours I could not then enjoy. . “Emancipation came. You, admit that it was 1 who brought it about. The year before emancipation thouth wearing 1: stuff gown, and belonging to the outer’bnr thy professmnal emoluments exceeded £8,000—an niiiouiit never before realised in Ireland, in the same space oftime by an outer barrister. ' l “ Had I adhered to my profession, I must soon have been called within the bar, and obtained the precedency ofa silk gown. The severity of my labour would have been at once much mitigated, whilst the emoluments would have been considerably increased. I could have done a much greater ,variety of business with less toil,and my professional in- never repined—iior ever shall repent. Once more high professional promotion was placed within a . I play the evidence ofa highly acute and intelle ol'Dr. Gordon, the minister ofthe Metropolitan H _ whom all men—even those who most bitterly . l '_ —are constrained to respect; ofDr. voluminous and efficient theological writers ofthe I Mr. M‘Dotiald, who has been not inaptly styled Apostle, . Highlands to-day than ofall the chiefs from the, Kiiityre to the most easterly rock in Caithness; .' closes with that ol'Dr. are universally ackiiowledgetl.——-Bannerof Ulster. ‘ my reach. —— quei‘ became vacant. CANADIAN AFFAIRS. the office ofthe posed to me. . lianced by the manner in which it was made, and pre-emi- neutly so best Englishman that Ireland ever Norn'uiuby. Their own and I refused the offer. by you, with mean and sordid motives. of York and Lancaster exhibited a covering of snow and hour li‘ost, not very usual on the 20th ofOctober. The show: are of leaves that followed, both on the hills and in the plains, are stripping the trees of their richly variegated autumnal garb, and presenting after one of the finest harvest seasons in the memory ofmaii. ——Lreda Mercury. ' George “Wilson, a former to emigrate to America, in shillings. may be stopped by simply raising I Leeds, was declared a Bankrupt in 1812. the present, and the still more Pefifioumg credimrvs daring alternative of suspending the fresh Canadian con- Bench p,.;sm,,,md were he 8,3” remains! the past four years of fraudulently using short Weights and measures. last session Mr Hume moved for a “ A return of the steam and sailing packets employed under the conveyance of the mails; stating the name and tonnage of each vessel, and where stationed aiid employed: the number ol'ofiicers and men, the “lull”! “31"“3‘1 WSUIS °l “ each of the vessels, and the Which it is, the future I packet . “An event occurred whicn I could not have foreseen. c The office of Lord Chief Baron ofthe Exche- I was offered it. Or, had I preferred Master ofthe Rolls, the alternative was pro- It was a- tempting ofihr. Its value was en- by the person through whom it was made—the. saw—the Marquis of “But Idrcamed again a day-dream—was it a dream ?— And here am I now taunted, even “1 do not think Ialll guilty of the least vanity, when I I have done. Icare lfeel the proud ’5 greater, .— On Thursday morning, the hills which divide the counties the appearance ofn premature winter, The Durham Chronicle states that a collier, nam‘ed.Tlio- nas Robson, hasjust had property worth £7000 left him by neighbour, to whom, when about 1811, he lent the sum of twenty Dr. Negrier, a- French physician, announces an ac- the arms above the head. respectable merchant at He disputed the debt, was committed to the King’s Mr. John 1)uli‘eue,lorincrly a Upwards of 6,000 tradesmen have been convicted during Goveaxiisx'r S'rmn AND SAILING PACKET3.——Dllrlng the Adtiiii‘iilty for the and the expense, in the year 1841, for aggregate charge for all the s, stating also, as far as the some can be given, the ofthese vessels, or the year 1811, for the seve- to the public, so as to exhibit the net charge it we find, the net charge to the public, in the year 1841, was £43,889; that ofthe four stoaiiiers between Hollyhend and Kingstown” £9,912; that of the five between Milford anti \Valei‘foril, £18,944: two at l’ortpatrick, £2,562; three at \Veymmitli, 7,008 ; seven at Dover, £22,191 ;tlie ship Astrwa at Falmoutli, £8,062; six Mediterranean steamers, £60,714; and seven at the West India station, £37,751. The net charge to the pub- lic for sailing vessels 11121118 same year isz—For nine from. Falmouth to Brazil, 85c. £27,668; thirteen from the same port to the West Indies, North America, &c. £30,365, and five to Rio Jaiieiro, £9,932. In addition to these, there are ( various stuns charged for contract of vessels; the principal items under this head being. Fahnoiitli and Peninsula, £30,- 066; Liverpool, Halifax and Boston (the mail line of steam- ers), £46,531; Falinoutli and Alexandria, £90,910; and Lon- don and Hamburg, £16,000. The total expense ofall these classes of steam aiid sailing vessels, iii the year 1841, was £450,970; the amount received for passengers and parcels (exclusive of postage),.£33,225; and the net charge to the public, so litr as relates to the Admiralty, £417,744. The gross total of the sailing and steam-vessels registered in Great Britain and Ireland, on the 31st December, 1811, was 23,591 vessels, and their tonnage 3,760,315. To ManiNERs.—Bearings ofa dangerous rock, off Stokev head, eastward ofthe Mewstoun, liPnt‘ Plymouth, as ascor- tained correctly the llth October, 1812, by W. ll. Miller, Commander, Royal Charlotte, revenue cruizer:—l\1:iltcr Church, a handspike’s length within Ronny Point; the bluff parts of Stoke-head N. E. by N. 600 yards, or one-third ofa mile; the corner ofa wall, eastward of Stoke-head, on with a large rock about half way down the hill; the base ofthe rock covers the space of about a furlong ; it has only three feet water on the shoalest part at low water spring tides, with from eleven to seven fathoms all round it, very close; deep water from the inner part to five fatlmuis close in with the shore. Maker Church open ofi' Kenny Point will clear you to the southward. A Cancel—The ship America, Captain Fisher, arrived at this port on Saturday, from the Pacific Ocean, after an absence of twenty-six months, with a cargo of4,700 barrels of Oll (400 sperm,) and 45,000 lbs. of whalebone. This is the largest cargo ever recorded in the annals ofthe whale fishery in any part of the world. Captain Fisher is a son of c1.3ut’lfngir-town, a thorough-bred whaler.——.Vew Bcdford .Mer- THE Jews—The Standard publishes a letter addressed to the Jews “scattered throughout England, Scotland, and Ire- land,” and signed “Joseph VVolfi', Citrate of High lIolylaud, near Vantefield, Yorkshire, late Missionary in Palestine, Bak- hara, Afi'ghanistan, Abyssinia, Yemen, and America.” Dr. \Volfi'relnikes the Jews on'tlie schism among them, and then makes tinsexhortation :—-“ My dear friends, rally round the aged Rabbi llirschel, and, under his direction, invoke the guidance and illumination of the Spirit from on high; and under lllS direction, read the Old and New Testament, and request Rabbi llirschel and his assistant Rabbies to investi- gate the merits ofthe Christilln faith, in unison with the Bish- ops ol the Church of England; and l have no doubt that the Lord will bless that national attempt of the Jews to' arrive at_tlie knowledge ofthe truth; and then let Rabbi Hirschel wnh the whole Jewish nation residing in England, recein the sacrament of baptism, the ordinance of Confirmation ' and then let Rabbi Hirschel be consecrated by the Bislio'is7 of England, as the Patriarch Bishop ofthe Hebrew Chris- tians in England.” ' Convoca'rion or Mmts’i‘sns or THE CHURCH or Scor- Lannq—V‘Ve insert in another column a very important re- quisition, signed by a number ofthe most venerable and respected ministers in Scotland, fora Convocation of the clergy on the 17th November. The gentlemen who call this meeting enjoy, in a very. marked degree, the esteem and confidence of their brethren in the difi'erent quarters of the country. They amply deserve that cotifideiice which the have obtained. Dr. Brewster, of Craig, whose name is fi y on the list, is one of the most respected and oldest minist “it in the east of Scotland, and whose high literary htl‘lllIIl-Pels have been long and extensively known. The swam} is that of Dr. Brown, of Langton, whose recent work on ofany other man, years has been carried oti between the two Church, on the subject of expulsion of the one party or the other from the“ ment can be prevented. . mental principle of the Church, ajudgnieiit has 1 pronounced by the House exposes our most conscientious ministers to pains allies, for the faithful discharge ofevery ecclesi and iii consequence of which, even in thejiidim M‘Farlan, of Greenock, certainly no extreme man; loved Church is now on the verge ofruin.” vinced, “that nothing can save the Church hilt the poWe employing as the means of its preservation the and firmness ofits ministers and elders, and’ rected efforts of its people. day, or the people If both be true to their Master’s cause, we may yet' deliverance.”—But then, without consistency in . ' durc, we may labour as much as we please, efforts will be completely neutralised.’ We shell. with one hand what we build up with the other.‘ e tiers may be assured that the question of nofi‘ ' although to some it may seem a trifling one, connected with the existence ofvital Christiaif land. darker and darker, and Christian goon in all empire are becoming aroused to the magnitude of which is at hand. ancient Presbyteriaus ofthe West, be found of We cannot do better than close these remarks lowing, is not a time for dent of God, but for firmness, courage, and dot and fora readiness to part with everything for truth ofGod. more strikingly so, to try men’s spirits. , and ourselves be found true men l”—-Scoltiah ' ‘ pared by required for the formation England and Scotland, gow, 1,551,430!.; No. 3, from Glasgow to Edinhtl stock and stations, 300,000l. on almost any given subject; ofIIli an, whose volumes on the Seasons have imparted ’f nd instruction to all who have read them, and Wu Dewar, on‘e . and whose name would have i'nore'we \Valsh, whose hiin literaryg Cnuacn or ScoTLanD.—'l‘he contest which ,fuv' non-intrusion, has new, rich :1 height, that human wisdom can hardlyseqf‘, Arising out of the same of Lords, which, if not We" with Dr. M‘Farlan, in the letter already” If the ministers faint remain listless and inactive, is every day: The ecclesiastical horizon Let not us, the representativ I from the last number of the London -- doubt ortimidity in the things It is .a time, and it will become May RAILWAY T0 SCOTLAND.—-Il appears, from n: ~ ., Mr. Locke, the civil engineer, that the - ' ofa grand line fail I will be 3,469,11 1. Which posed to appropriate as follows:—For section ' Lancaster to Carlisle, l,IO7,566!.; No.2. fromCarl - In addition to this proposed to havo 60,000l. for contingencies on tho and Glasgow line. .1. Ireland is now enjoying a tranquillity to which been a stranger. Even 'I‘ipperary is peaceale}, gistrates of the North Riding have presented an the Earl of Dououghmore, the Lord Lieutenant'- ty, congratulating him on the restoration of order in that region, of late the seat ofdisturba by the simple application ofthe means which law of the land has provided; and to imputo which has crowned all their cfl‘orts with m promptitnde, vigour, and discretion, of Earl DG' ministration. They request that his lOl‘dSlllPW his Excellency their gratelul thanks for the sures adopted by him to ensure the peace am”, ' e the district. This address bears the signature ' of the wealthiest and most. influential 36ml county, all in the commission of the peace- Donoughmore, in his reply, states the pleasure ceivcd from this document; and encloses ' aiistver, expressive of the satisfaction be has 6 ‘ the result of his policy. Lord French, a Roman Catholic Peer, has self a Repealer. He is, we believe, the only peerage who has done so. ’I‘ns Waecx or THE RUSSIAN Stupor-Wan". ‘” liolt, who commands the North Cape steamg‘l’r to the Finance Department ol the Russian 36‘ according to the returns ofCaptaiii Troflini ' board the Ingermrmnland, 3'2 officers, besides tl’t _. loremastitieii, 24 women, and S) children—ill , Such ofthem as were saved and reache embarked on the 3rd 0f()ctnber, iii Christin ofa Russian corvette and a Finlandish slot) were the Captain, 13 officers, 472 mer ' child. Altogether 493 persons. It is, MS. that some have been saved by English crul about 400 men have been drowned. ., .OPENISG or THE WALHALLA.-—Tll0 wnl built by the King of Bavaria in couiineflllq ‘ gmshed Germans, was solemnlv inaugural , the 18th inst. The whole court arrived fro the town was crowded with persons of i‘l procession arrived at the foot ofthe elevntlo.’ . monument is erected, the King aliglited l ' M and ascended the steps, accompanied by Prl" Prussian; next came Prince William ofPt‘lfl!’ I‘beresa; the Prince Royal with his mum” > then came Prince Leopold with him?I ‘. ‘. Duchess of Hesse, and Prince Charles .with. Wurtemberg. A band of musicians a ‘ on the second terrace, began a I] ma Ill?“ Pliny entered within the gates. [be slow prOCcssmn, in ascending the IIIJIDBI'OIII. 9” V the portion ofthe temple, formed a hlghly '. tacle. When the king reached the entra'tl ‘ of the Government addressed his M13: as which de dwelt on the importance to ' ’ I respect, Of this work, which had been ‘7?” ' 119w executed. He said—“ The Wdlll'll' tlium of modern Germany, and tho “"1" ' dei‘ will, until the most remote 8385i 49, recollection ofevery one who haul " Wishes for the welfare of his country- . . —“MR.V the Walhalla contribute to. 11$ the feelings of German natioullllyf every race henceforth feel they have I_ >' ‘ country ofwhich they may be proud} .- g labour according to his faculties to ‘ "’ ' =gg-Eg - . NOVA SCOTIA l’ , ' (From the Pitta“, 1‘0 keep up an incessant all“ , the colony is neither agreeable to :[zlgfggillla‘lla]; gxcited much attention, The third is that of mill peace; but when we find, . Ii wu, one ol the most venerable ministers in (tatives,a total disregard of the the Queen, nor to our disposi