Tue Dune or Devonsninc’s,.Gicsuric CONSERVA- Tonv AT, CnaTswonTn144Not the least attractive of the macrobjects that claim the notice of the visitor in this ' I is one perfectly original and unique, just now 't’rug into existence, which will command the atteni u'of future visitors at Cbatswortb, and towhich the modern Parisiaus would unquestionably affix the title of,“ Serra .Monstre.” It is a true gigantic conservatory in,.'course of erection. and probably by this time com- ‘ pleted.-at a short distance from the great waterwork or the park. Here a spot of ground has been claith of trees and shrubs to the extent of two acres, 05.5 5T'which is being covered over with glass. The surface will contain seventy thousand square feat ofglass, divided into slips each two feet long and six inches wide, arranged in perpendicular rows, and ")9 Slips of every two rows inclining to each dither, form acute angles upwards and downwards, or a C of horizontal zig-zag lines of'paues of glass one alibfldlie Other. Here then, under this enormous dome some; of 'the best garden soil will be strewed on the levelled ground, to the extent ofseventy thousand square feet, including both wings; and in it will be planted, chitin, or transplanted, every vegetable production that requires a permanent atmospheric heat, higher than what is peculiar to our own climatema temperature for which suitable provision has béen made under the conservatory, by means of boilers and pipes, conveying hotvgater along corridors some hundreds of feet in length, and high enough for a man to walk upright in them from one end to the other. The various plants, shrubs, and flowers ofthe two tropics, and Australia, will be reared in this artificial southern hemisphere, arranged in groves and parterres, as if they were growing naturally on the spot, without the appearance ofpot or box of any kind; s’tremnlets of running water, or standing pools will give freshness to the sultry atmosphere ; and mean- dering paths through these bowers. and a carriage-way acroslfaud all round, will convey the enchanted visitor with ease to every part of this conservatory. Wasunn Annnv ——Woburn Abbey occupies the site of the original abbey, founded in the early part of the 12th century by Hugh de Bolebec, for the monks ofthe Cistercian order. A very small portion remains of its ancient foundation, so many alterations, and at times considerable, have been made by different architects. It 'a quadrangular building, enclosing a hollow square, ch is laid out as a flower garden. The west front is s of 300 feet long, and has a centre and two 'lh spacious intermediate offices. The base- roughout is rustic, and the centre fagade handsome pcdimcnt being supported by Ionic columns. The east front is ' equality of the ground is deprived act. The building is neverthe- considered one of the most in this country. The sa- and lofty .m demands the attention. . - . "g6 compartme iih a coved ceiling, grind w'm Q‘Om- The walls are d elaborately re- “ “"1 gold brocade and the c ~ (,yviih a superb Ire exquisitel carved. d ' 0mm! ‘ f ' valuable er’hl an mmed' It COM urmmre and Elizrilie'th "ii llin.Se or ancls Duke (sis-mm" the late duke air zlic‘rimnes's or Tam'mk’ maigfml by Sir Joshua, Reynrdlrifmmd ‘0 Queen Charlotte, hi9. vm‘iyke’s admired "Din‘dmnpymg I°."“‘-" and some of in. Nicholas Poussin, of- an. otherwise '"0 "rinsing, and loop is the apartment whic Itis a )spacious divided into loze l a prominent place. alus fastening the wingsnf ’ 7 , irillo s, Annaban Caracci . Guerci o R L n , embrandt, Ho uca Giordano, &c., embellish the apartment. ppner left‘of the solo ' 2:26". invrludgpeopig‘ng‘zigplg 22m the gallery, attractive priatzdca’gugs and vases, are a suit ofsix rooms, annro- 4 anti" m _ e use o_f‘tlie Queen and Prince Albert r 8g men: recent visit lherc. In the State Bedcham- is “grit; prripted to 'her Majesty—the enfretted ceilino or, "is (yoqterieved With-gold, and the fittings tlirorialioul and Row; wtietsht migipyépéfrn.. The bedstead is ofivhite hangings are of amber satinrllcpT.h:ntrh€ild)tl}la m“, Md the edit valuable display of gold, the varion prising the, whole of the much valued he the_.possession of the illustrious lien flmilV. In addition to the porno-'- and Duchess ofBedford su ‘ » Hayter’s well-known pew ussell,” and 7m, 3, romahis the vr- .JN’T s caskets corn. ir-loom pl; the Russell 5 of the present Duke , curled from the walls. are ruling of “The Trial of Lord seei’s “Chevy Chase." In this uinal Lion’s Head, erected by Addison at Button’s Coffee-house in Russell-street, Comm-gar- den, in July, 1713. The adjoining rooms are all splendidly fitted up and adorned with many of the choicest works of the modern artists, purchased by the late duke, one of the most liberal patrons ofthe fine arts of his day. , EXTRAORDINARY Once or WHEAT, SELF-SOWN.-—lllr. W. White, of Hynds Farm, quton, in the parish of Silvertou,iu this county, has a field ofwlieat offour acres, which has sown itselfby corn falling from the ears at the 'last harvest. Mr. White's intention was to have sown this field with turnips, but conceiving that the ploughing up such blades of wheat as presented them-~ selves would be a species of destruction, be determined to risk the matter, and the result is a crop ofwbcat such as has not its parallel in the parish, some of the ears being nearly a quarter ofa yard in length. The moat respectable judges calculate there will be from 25 to 30 bushels per acre, and curiosity leads numbers to the spot to view it. It will be sufficiently ripe to cut in less than a fortnight, should the weather prove favour- able.-—Dcvonpurt Telegraph. Mr. Macaulay having been asked by the Town-Coun- cil of Edinburgh for a subscription towards the support of the races oftliat city, replied by rebukiiig the body, very properly, for their improper demand—— 4“To the first place, I am not clear that the object is a good one; in the next place,I am clear that by giving money for such an object, in obedience to such a sum- mons. I should completely change the whole character of" my connexion with Edinburgh. It has been usual enough for rich families to keep a holder: corrupt bo- roughs by~defraying the expenses of public amusements: sometimes it is a ball, sametimes a regatta. The Derby ferriin used to support the Preston , races. The Mem- bers for Beverly, I believe, find a bull for their constitu- ents to bait. But these were not the conditions on “Which I undertook to represent Edinburgh. 11) return * for your generous confidence, I offer faithful Parliamen- .tary;iservice, and nothing elscy I am, indeed, most , {willing to do what lean towards assisting your regis- ' ti’htiqn; Iam willing to contribute the little that I can spawns your most useful public charities. But even that Iid‘o not consider as matter of contract. Nor should I think it proper that the Town-Council should call on I me tocontribute even to a hospital or a school- tbe call which is now made is one so 0 I thirstyplainly sayI would rather ta to be sent to the Emperor of'Russia. secretary, with a_. ympliment diiced him beneath the level ofthe ancient Dioclesiau ancieutly had no continual speaker, but after consultation, William Rufus there was a great par people, that time. But the first speaker certainly separately. Sir Richard \angruvo (5th Richard II,) was the be the first speaker that petitioned for freedom ofspeecli ;aud Sir Thomas Hargrave (lst Elizabeth) was the first that made request for privilege from arrests, 8w. Sir J. Bushey (11th ’ regal (I t reside us On the ofthe British. d family portraits‘ and 8th Jul.“ bles present. : But bjectionable, that he the Chiltern J Hundreds than comply with it.” I The Dublin Pilot tells an amusing anecdote of a" autocrat and. an autograph. Mr. O'Connell was asked lately by a lady of high rank for an autograph, t0 g0 If} a collection of the bandwritings of“ celebrated persons. Mr. O’Connell’s ary expression of regret at refusing “so distinguished a lady,” replies for his mas- ter— “ The fact (to use his own words) is, that the hideous crueltie: of the present Emperor of Russia, perpelrMEd in Poland even upon women and children, have marked his character with a deeper shade ofinfamy than that which stains the reputation ofthe Roman Nero; whilSt his Satanic persecution of Catholic Christianity has re- Mr. O’Connell therefore cannot consent by any act of his. however slight, to appear to pay '1 compliment to so atrocious a monster.” SPEAKERS or THE HOUSE or Cannons—The Commons agree upon some person olutions. In the reign of liumeut held at Rocking- bnm, and a certain knight came forth and stood below ‘the and spake in the name and behalf ofthcm all. 'lhis akcr of the House of Cornmous at known was Peter when the Lords and Corn- lcnst gave their decisions their manner ofprocecdiug was to of great abilities to deliver their res was undoubtedly the spa tle Montford, (41th Henry 111,) mons sat in several houses, or at adc any formal apology for inability, as now practised. Richard Rich, .‘lsq.(28th Henry VIII,) was the first of our speakers who made request for access to the King. Thomas Moyle, Esq., (34th Henry V111,) is said to first speaker that m Rich. II.) was the first speaker presented to the King by the Commons;and when Sir Arnold Savage was speaker, .(Qd Henry IV.) it was the first time the Commons were required by the King to choose a weaken—Luz: Constitution. INDIA—Sir Gordon Bremer left Calcutta, in the Queen steamer, on the 26th May, for Canton. The expedition fi‘om Calcutta and Madras bud sailed with the Filly-fifth and Forty-ninth Regiments, a detachment ofArtillery and Sap- pers, and a company of Native Rifles. With the expedition were some armed small craft for river service. Opinions were divided whether the immediate object of the expe~ dition was the recapture of Cbusan, or a direct advance on Pekin. The Supreme Court of Bombay had committed to prison an Italian friar, who calls himself“ Vicar General,” for hav— ing, notwithstanding the special order of the Court, served on him, married a boy who is a ward of the Court, aged six- teen years, to a young lady of eighteen. The friar and the mother of the lady remain in the public gnol. The event had occasioned considerable canstcrnation and discussion. Manxoxscan.—-“ The Phlegetbon,” says the Calcutta Hur- lraru, of May 525th, “ which arrived from Ceylon the day be- fore yestcrdny, is an armed iron steamer, and has brought round the King ofJolmnna, who, being expelled fi'om Ma- dagascar by on insurrection of his subjects, has come here to solicit the aid ofthe British Government to reinstate him on his throne.” Three alternatives are proposed by the King dejure t0 the Indian Government: first, the loan of troops and a small ship of war; secondly, the loan of two lacs of rupees, to enable the King to raise an armament himself, lag restore the trade ofthe country to its legitimate cbnu- " thirdly, the occupation ofthe country by the British, r His Majesty n sufiiciency to maintain himself with '59ty upon the island ofJobuuna, where he would nominal Sovereign, and, in fact, the Viccgereut 1 C“NDIA'_1I' ,last accounts from Candia'are dated the hopeless Elle Cityse ofthe iusurgptits then appeared to be worsted ‘in n ole t leN'ival ot Tabir Pasha, the Greeks were m l . _ ‘fary every \igagemeut. Ilic Turkish regular A); met-3"]?! SOldicrs bad perpetrated horrible excesses. b V t'lt‘ciluI action on the QISt June, the Turkish troops, guided l a oonelyust landed from Constantinople, sacked and destroyed the villa cs ' q.i ‘ - crops, robbed the CLllurcliIriluiiih§W 1 c. ’ “rm violating the WWAgs, mutilated the prisoners, and after Jon-id ,’,,.. -u ' on and youngr girls, beat them in the most uci'. All these atrocities were committed in ofsevere orders issued by Mustnphn Pasha. Tahir re- paired to the spot to inquire into the facts. .A French fri- gate, the Minerve, anchored along the adjoining coast; and the captain of the British ship Ilcubow, who had arrived from the Piraeus at Suda on the 3d, was charger] by Sir Ed- mond Lyons to institute the strictest investigation into these occurrences. The European Consuls had addressed com- plaints on the subject to Tzihii' Pasha; who replied that be had been unable to master the fury of his soldiers. He gate a rather cool reception to the commander ofthe Bcn« bow. Private letters from Athens of the 3lst July announce that on the preceding day Her Majesty’s frigate Tyne and the sloop Hazard arrived at the Piraeus from Candiu, having on board all the members of the Cretan provisional Govern- ment, who, having been betrayed by a certain Roussas, bad no other alternative left but to surrender to the Turks or es- cape ou board the English squadron. They of course pre- ferred the latter alternative. Valentzas had again made his appearance in Thessaly, at the bead ofa party of insur- gents, and intended, it was believed to march on Volo. pin—"I PROJECT or SUPPORTING Exchsu COLONIAL BISHOPRICS nv Mr..th or THE VOLUNTARY Panama—The project of endowiug the English colonial bishoprics by the free-will offerings and contributions of the Parent Church at borne, is one ofthe best, and noblest, and wisest designs, which has ever emanated from our English prelntcs. It is worthy of the Church which forms the strength and vanguard of Protestantism in Europe and throughout the world, and when carried into effect, it will do more to raise the moral and religious character of our country than the most splen- did victories and achievements, either by sea or land ...... ..I is little to be wondered at that those who have encouraged wars in favour of opium, and who could give fresh incite- ments to the foreign slave-trade, can see no beauty and no excellence in this most pruisewortby undertaking. The stunted intellects of men who are always pratiug about po- H factories to the more healthy pursuits ofagriculture, are just the creatures to decry all such magnauimous and really philanthropic exertions. There, indeed, is a boundless field for the exercise of that voluntary principle which they have posed than they do everything to cripple its energies—t0 Why is it that this “cheap defence ” of the Church of Eng- principles? 5 not hall with joy the prospects of providing for the endow. merit of our colonial sees from the voluntary munificence of litical economy, and who prefer the smoke and tarnish of so much vaunted and applauded; yet no sooner is it pro- weaken and withstand its exercise and triumpli......... ..Aud what is the secret ot'tliis atrocious and unnatural maliguity? land is not welcomed, even by those who dissent from her Why is it that those who were ever roaring about the idle and lazy wealth of the Church and clerwy, do itical Dissenters abhor it, their outcries against oin— ts can be required ble design to the d member of u be more ur of such d Stanley? the Conservativecause. The pol because it would put to shame all ecclesiastical polity. And what al'gttmen stronger than these to recommend this p0 d hearty zeal and co-operatiou of every then an the Church of England? What arguments fca potent to commend it tp the attention and avo men as Sir Robert Peel, Sir Robert Inglis, and Lor .ble bon Depcud‘upou it this would foym the strongest pussy: Love is of union amongst all genuine Conservatlves. d , r y of stronger than death,” and if the full force an gue'tgzvi Christian love and charity can be thus develope- , 1h,lit it constitute a. new era in our eccleSiastical annals, W this- carries out the benefits of the Church of England téiloui h of taut Colonies, it will confirm and consolidate the mic 'n Exwland at home to an extent beyond the most saugui e bop’es of her friends, or the deadliest fears of heir agyelrfétl; rics. .‘Ve trust, therefore, that the prelates of .t to i . will lose no time in convening a public .mectmg to cats); this splendid design into execution. It will form a no .6 vestibule to that Conservative temple, which we l‘iopenlt‘altl long, to behold rising amongst us in all its digrfi'ig. lande Queen of England, as the bead ofthe Church 0. ug' i cannot refuse her influence and patronage to this nationa outbreak oberistiau charity—Morning Herald. A lnrsu PUSEYITES AND THE CHURCH or SCOTLANDfT. controversy has been carried on for the last two or tllnpe months in the pages of the Irish Eccleswsltcal Journa ,1 .t )e organ of the I’useyite party in Ireland, between the ct um and the Dean of Achonry, the author of “.Letters on the ten- dency of the Oxford Tracts,” lately pubhshed by Sceley....... The _ Dean maintains that the Presbyterians are Christians, and that the Cbiircb of Scotland is a branch of the Christian Church, and as such to be remembered in our prayer??? coming within the pale ofthe “ Catholic Church, as. e « ued in the 55th canon,“thal is, the whole body'of Christiap people dispersed tln‘oughout the whole world.” Against tlplis tudinaiian heresy of the liberal dean, the editor of t e ms Ecclesiastical Journal (supported by the prlmate and u larglei proportion of the Irish Protestant clergy, as well as by ad the English Puscyites) enters lus most solemn protest ,. ap two “ correspondents ” have now come to the aid of t is learned doctor. One oftbese, in the number for July, as sorts that Church of England mcu cnuuot acknowledgetbe Presbyterian body “ a church, wifliouta surrender of principle, and a compromise of the truth ;” nor “until we are prepared to admit the same of the .Mrihomelans of Turkey, or of the wor- shippers of the Lama, in Thibet” I .’......Wbat Will Dr. Cooke, of Belliist, think of this! or what will Dr. Chalmers say, who undertook ajourney from Edinburgh to London last year, for the purpose of'dclivering a course of'lectures in support of church establishments, and of the Church of England as one oftliesc, and a “sister church” 1......The High Church party are very glad to avail themselves of the assmtauce of the Presbyterians, when they want to carry on u crusade against national education, conciliation towards Roman Ca- tholics, the grant toiMayuootli, or any other liberal and en- lightened measure. For a time they make common cause with the “ Samaritans,” or mongrel Christians ; but no sooner is there a prospect ofa Tory government taking away all occasion for opposition to any liberal measure, by gratit- iiig a cessation of hostilities against cherished abuses 'in cluircb and state, and thereby giving a truce and a quiet life to the defenders of corruption, than the poor presbyte— rians are thrown overboard, us no more Christians than the Mahometnns 01' the worshippers of the Grand Lama l l-— L 0NDON MonNiNc C-iIRONrCLE. DREADFUL STATE or TRADE AT l“A‘SCHESTER AND Pars— an.—Ouraccouuts from the important seats of the cotton manufactures are most distressing and even alarming. iNever at any period was there greater gloom and stagna- tion. At Paisley five and twenty firms have sunk in one terri— fic crash! At Manchester the markets are glutted, prices are almost nominal, the banks rigorous, credit terrible scenes, and failure after failure bursts upon the community, like the ex- plosion ofshells in a besieged city, spreading terror- and (19- struction around. The whole of the great cotton districts of Lancasbire sympathise with Manchester. The stocks of goods are extremely heavy, and tremendous losses will be sustained if the holders should be compelled to sell at present , prices. Under those circumstances the employment ofthe operatives is greatly diminished, and must be regarded as ex- ceedingly precarious. Extensive distress prevails among that class. In Yorkshire the trade is not so bad as in Laucasliire, but d landlords are mui a man must get land or starve l to killing bim— _ , “ If you turn out a man and his family, to stat-sq, a'émurder than if you destroyed them with n sword, or the pistol, or the musket; famine and: ‘ are as formidable instruments of destruction g . or the dagger or the bayonet ; and I stand hem country from the criminality of those clearane ’ dercrs on thel qleagputée system- -ke the lives of individua an or s are eq illiioiridthe eye of God. No person can sny'wb bury was murdered: I believe the impressmn stronger eVei-y day that be was not mugilerqriiab ' the people. No person can tell whyB Ii , I“ ed. No person can say why Mr. or pli- Bry amiable and excellent man, was mur cred. » can say that he deserved the enmity of thp pain” if there was a cause, it 15's murder sti l—it, against which the red arm of God’s vengeancr;1 wit raised to punish the perpetrator, as against all; employ the wholesale system of egterrp‘ipatéon. remedy for this state of things. Wl' it o to number of the police, and pour in male army :9 , No. The murders will still take place: the pol)” are at the side ofoue class of the murderer-sew,» I sauce, instead of pr-chntmgr them, will only induce lords, by the hope of escaping with impunity, gnu thoee murders.” - The proper reme tenure. Mr. O’Conne wards said that when the . . nexiou with the Whigs—“a Ministry who bays 0 Repenlers”——totally ceases on its present basis. ed on the next day of meeting to propose. the , which he intends to found the future operations) ciatiou. He finished by hinting at some extreme” to encounter the Tories witbal: praismg the , their dogged obstinncy at Crecy, Porctiers, and; (shared in by the Irish at Waterloo,) be said—.— ,y “I now tell the English, that the Irish are . they are of evinciug the some quiet and determm Their principle was to die, but never to be \Vlienever going into battle that should And, why do I say that? Because——- (J1 i: try it”) Iftliey try it, it shall be their fault ; and we drel, ifthey try it, that won’t pay them (ff in the (A volceé“We paid them of at Irontcnoy. ‘Loud . am here to prevent such a crisrs : but if the e come, I hope I am as ready to meet it as another: do I recur to those subjects? Because 1 find talking ofi-ebcllion in Ireland. They are not Re are quiet men, who have been checking us. , lencc, and have been hitherto exclaiming aggiiw there is one among them who has been usmg ’ oppose us—I mean no less a man than Ii‘rerlenck Conwayfi'i 9“ Nothing your enemies desire moreun way they view it, than a precocious insurrection. would they more anxiously wish for _tban a pre I ult—eveu though they forced you to it. Let no fore be mad enough to indulge tliem,untr.l they r. pal him to do it. * if * Let me whisper John Bu] ,, word in his friendly ear. Let me tell him the boats which they say bring us near England, c ten days from America.” (Great cheering, which I ‘ time.) . And he hinted at something more tremendous rebellion in Ireland— . “Let my voice go through the land. Be cauti enemies, whose wish must be,tbat you place you . .- wrong; violate no law; give them no advantage even by accident ; respect the Queen, that amiabl . loved monarch ; keep, preserve for her, your all ' purchased and uupurcbaseable. She may, like monarch, have to fly among you for protection * . about indulging in the aspiration that it might be it were, he mocks me much who talks of my adv ,. { Tremendous cheering, which lastedfor several "Limited, again and again renewed, until the very walls ofthe, existing system, him out was e‘l“a t dy was the removal of the ll went on to explain his bill. Tories came into ofii seemed to shirt: with the acclanuztion.) ' SCOTLAND. The town of Peeblcs has been the scene of an _, tribute to literary, and more than literary merit» % nesrlay Week, a public dinner was given to Messrs ' al_l_fL.B._f‘;hf-3l‘£ Cllalflbflsqlhm.udit9_i‘§ and publishers‘of C still at Leeds and Bradford it is greatly depressgfiyrfni'm‘m- ingham, \Volverliamptou, Sheffield. 'V 'Iégfield, Glasgow, and‘iudeed tbrouubo'1‘-" " ' m, the trading classes are §llflEI‘|"" ' seVercly. The failure of the Mucclesfield, otness, \ existing distress and causes of further embarassments. average in Germany. compared with last week. ominous for the country, and calculated to convince a Pro Leeds .Mercury. IRELAND. bill for the better security of tenures in Ireland. He beg however, by announcing a new movement in Irish man ' turcs: his friend, Mr. Duggau, of Manchester, is to intr hand-loom weaving into Ireland— “The first experiment in that way is to be mad females, and when they succeed, we willii prosperous, men of capital in various part embark in the same kind of manufact have many a virtuous woman employed in idleness and want. A poor law wlucn 1 was always opposed ; and ti) more I am convinced that I was rig in opposing it. wages, not alms, that the people \ it.” from the exertions of the Dubli tber unbaudsome return whic “as been made for it“ “In the year 1800 there re 1,100 operative hosiers ii Dublin at full work; whil increased to 100 ; but t1 that number he. kept or at least whilst tli so notoriorsly hosti itself. I believe the movement, employment those even line of sep to stand whilst the board has no politics voting for Mr. Hutton and me. tion; and lsay, ifthey do, "I one Eric and let them st and we ll sec w 0 will have most ‘ ”‘ He it turned to his bill. He positedctalibse to legret. whic t went, that the institution of sec ty merely of particular individuals ty; and that the tenant should be , , landlord. He could not its own members? found in the Conviction, that such an effort would add inc culnbly to the strength and security of our ecclesiastical tablisbmeut. It is to be found in the conviction tli would bring incalculable strength to any Conservati nistry which aided and encouraged these volunta tions. The infidels hate it, because it wank!) ' beauties and benefits of Christian charity afi e"G_V016nce on the most extended scale. The \Vhigs r' Radlcals de- 't test it, because it would bring fresh glori" and honours to The answer to this question is to be way his lanlerd’s rights, by the same p0wer that bar landlord could distrain on distress: the Irish landlo which enabled them to sell the distress the tenant, and even to sell the wrowin landlord was the only man that could do proposed, by the same legislative power repant—‘t to tear the nails and extract the: grinding landlords and agents in this count:- his tenant, rds had procured an enactinen SO. Mr. O’Conuel ), ,7 i and other banks, and the convulsive movements of some of the joint-stock banks, are at once indications of tlie u the face of this state of things, the price of corn is rising very rapidly, under the effects of bad Weather, ascertained injury to the wheat crop, very low stocks of corn both in country and abroad, and the certainty of a crop fur below the Within six weeks, the average price of wheat in England, according to the Gazelle, has risen from 645. 4d. to 68s. 2d. per quarter, and it is still rising fast. At Wakefield, yesterday, the advance was Is. 2d. per quarter, as These are facts exceedingly Corn-law ministry that it will not lie on a bed of roses.— The proceedings of the Dublin Repeal Association on the 2d were diversified by the introduction of Mr. O’Connell’s’ neighbourhood, and Mr. Duggan is sending over to 10 twelve looms for that purpose. Those looms are tobe Worked by forty more to work; and if the undertakinn‘ e Ultimately f Ireland will 5, and We will 0 is now pining .5 been passed, to more Isee of it the It is He alluded to the benefit w Ch had already accrued oard of Trade, and to ano- at the time the Board was form- ed there were not over 50 That number, however, has been increase cannot continue, or even olitics ofsome connected with it are to the cause of Ireland and of her trade ere are men who have profited well by nd who have turned persons out of their I There are nnected wrtb trade who wish to draw a here We are ready and on the other, principle upon property IS not for the but all members of _ protected as well as , be said, be accused of taking because-lie only proposed to take 1 bestowed. At the common law a but could not sell the summarily to eject g cr0p, though the to protect the fangs from the Under the bers’ Edinburgh Journal, at which (miteedomof th burgh was presented to them, natives of the pla ; chair was filled by Provost Pattesou: the company, included several guests from Edinburgh, and‘Mr;0 __ London publisher of the Journal, numbered upwards hundred. When the Chairman proposed the health two chief guests, be handed to each his burgess-ticket, closed in a box, with the following inscription, were”. name only being difl‘crwt— ‘ - ’ V ‘ “The freedom ofthe ancient and royal burgh of!" having been this day conferred by the Magistrateb‘ Town-Council upon William and Robert Chamberfi; quires, their lcllowtowusmen, in testimony and appr ‘ ol‘tbcir eminent Services in literature, education, pulm- impyovomeiit, which have rendered them throughout/(lie civilized world; the admirers of ti: [lemon V‘sidcut in their native town and. county', [hem ty'a public entertainment on the occasion,«fl§ gem , Mr. William Chambers with this box, for s- i (fizz/g; aken from the foundation of the Old Tweed I] ebles, of the age of which there is no t'eco Which box his burgess—tickct was placcd.—-4tb Au Mr. William Chambers acknowledged the t by no means the first of his race who has been H Peebles, as appears by tbe'sketcli which be Gave 0« ly’s history— a f‘I am called upon particularly to notice the; i" - this compliment. It has been said that prophets an! to be honoured in their own countr : we can an i that the first rem- - y' y, ‘ aikable honour paid to us has i in not only our own country, but in the ' very ' 21:31." Here, where, twenty-eight years ago, W5 ' . pon the world to use the faculties Which-B given us—bere, after doing our best in the int ‘ prove rand use those faculties, are we received Syfiloljggiagfiogqbigtérp‘iu lipnougnble men,f . is glad to claim ui-s) ‘tmt t e Place 0 “ _ . ‘ as her children. Photo is peculiarly striking in this recognition. We are' [jiggslpjetlll 18mg line of burgesses of Pcebles. _ If“ you will Seete with your ancestors from time i will find thataic lé your records, if they ‘go bac ‘ . probably m :11) 'lSOp of the name which I now the conclusiiiii oniImll ".vas cmef mangtmte of before the town 18 t uiteentb century, or 11qu , Second We . was made a royal burgh by Km for two-hundrégn trace on: family here, from’ pride in havin’ years. Good reason have we mm Th t g our names enroiludan the list ‘ whil-a Iae riiusactiOiis of this_day indissoluhly‘, P Ce m which our family has lived for“ generations—perha )8 sin ' ‘ ’ Saxon People.” I 08 It was film settled by his was i SketCh_ afterwar it “dOyvit‘iir to certain fflnil a Visa e to remove to Edinburc ' thirteen years of age. What Wefeh illielilgim ' dured while an apprentice, it would be 01“ i say; and it would be equally irrelevant to “'0qu the history of my early career. It would ‘ enough when Isay, that at nineteen years 02'f H ‘ myself my own master, and five Sl’llllln in “litb that mighty sum, 3 baudfulof 01%s " friends either to encourage or to euiba rose "10, I into busuiess on my own account—deletinle fidopgiug Franklin as a model, and keepin" 39‘ egyp aniligllial motto,‘ Contra Nando Incremrénfl’mi smayl :1 ate ; learned to set types at my 0W" i“ " dis OS (01 umes and tracts leaf by leaf, and firm“ ‘ p e of them, No species of labour (13 l ’ l , (Is followed by a brief auto y misfortunes, our H t l