-' HASZAR.l)’S GAZETTE, DECEMBER. 1. Hoaaoas or -run RUSSIAN Cosseairrios. Summary of laws. 3 A 8 Z A R D’ 8 g [G A Z*E E E, tlil:lysoty;eut:5r!ilt::y3‘t:: in;ll|,o||‘%l: ‘pzgzki: 1,1 3;. —A letter from Cracow of the 2d ult., says: " The recruiting amongst the Jews, and the carryin oil‘ for the military schools of Jew- ish chil ren, aged from eight to ten, caused amongst that class of inhabitants in P0- land indescribable terror and desolation. In all the towns and villages near Kielec nothing but weeping and lamentation are to be heard. Mothers tear their hair and beat their heads against the walls, and fathers sacrifice their last penny to buy off their sons. Recently an unfortunate man, whose eldest son, though just about to be married, had been carried off, went to the chief town ofthe province to beg that a younger son, who accompanied him, might be taken instead of his brother, but the second son was likewise taken, and the elder was not given up. This gave such a shock to the father, that he was taken ill, and died in three days. The manner in which unfortunate recruits are treated is really cruel. For example those assembled at Kielec were, not long since, in spite of the cold, placed quite naked in rows in the streets to undergo medical inspection!” Another letter ofthe same place, of a later date, says:--“ The recruiting is carried on this year in Poland with greater rigour than in any other part of the empire. The kingdom has furnished 60,000 men, one- fourth of whom died in the hospitals before reaching their destination. ” Hansauao, Nov. 3.—There is some rea- son to believe that, after all, Russia has accepted the ofiice of mediator between Denmark and the United States, and pro- posed, as an adjustment of the dilliculties, that Denmark shall cede her island of St. Thomas to the United States for the sum of five millions of dollars, and total exemption of American ships and cargoes from the future payment of the Sound-dues. Al- though the colony is of no value to Den- mark in a pecuniary point of view, rather, causing an expense than bringing in a surplus, yet Denmark is said to have de- clined the proposal, out of consideration to the Western Powers, to whom such an acquisition of territory on the part of the mericans, so close to their oivn West Indian possessions, cannot be desirable. According to a letter from Berlin of the 1st inst., in the Post ./Imp! Gazette of Frank- fort, the Danish government perceives that its project for abolishing the Sound dues on payment of an indemnity equal to their value will encounter insurinountabtle obsta cles; and it therefore proposes to render them less onerous, by allowing comtnercial ships to pay them to the Danish Consuls in the Baltic ports from which they may have to sail, instead of having to stop in the Sound. A new conscription is ordered for Poland by the Emperor Alexander, independently ofthat for the whole Empire, as appointed in a recent manifesto. The conscription Fr.owi:a-rors I-‘OR Rooms.-——Fill a pot with coarse tnoss of any kind, in the same manner as it would be filled with earth, and place a cutting or seed in this moss; it will succeed admirably, especially with plants destined to ornament a drawing-room. In such a situation plants grown in moss will thrive better than in garden mould, and possess the great advantage of not causing dirt by the earth washing out of them when watered. For transportation, plants rooted in moss are said to be better adapted, on account of their lightness. The explanation of the practice seems to be this: that moss rammed into a pot, and subjected to continual watering, is soon brought into a state of decomposition, when it becomes a very pure vegetable mould; and it is well known that very pure vegeta- ble mould is the moot Proper vhf all Iiintbrlills tor the growth ofalmost all kinds of plants. The moss would also not retain more mois- ture than precisely the quantity best adapt- ed to the absorbent powers of the root, a condition which can scarcely be ohtaine with any certainty by the use ofearth. December. Lord Monck, M. P. for Portsmouth, one ofthe Lords of the 'l‘re:isnry, and Mr. W. H. Stephenson, also of the 'I'i'cnsury, and formerly Deputy Payinastei--General, together \\Illl Ml‘. Seutoii, as secretary, quire into nit matters connected with the Istate of public education in Ireland. It is stated in the Low Review for the present month that _ Chancery,” has bequeathed £300 to the moiety for the “ aineiidniciit of the Law." A vessel called the Robert Peel, which has just arrived in the Loire from Suinntra, has hrouglit a magnificicnt royal tiger for one of the pulilic menagcries. Forty armed men ivcre, it is stated, sent to capture him, VVHAT I1‘ Cosrs 'ro Dasss as Asisaicaiv them before he could be Secured‘ Lsnv.-—A female writer in the Home Jour- nal, in answer to the question, “ What does it cost to dress a lady? ” replies that ,9'f,|000 a year spent very carefully by a person who goes out much, would prove insuflicient; that $3000 is nearer the average, without including furs and jewelry, and that $3000 or 4000 could be spent very easily when Russian sables and diamonds were brought into question. Another correspondent of ‘the same paper says, she knows a lady mov- ing in the best society, who dresses for $575 a year. The steam trallic between the Clyde and New York is about to he I('ts‘ttlllC(l, the splen- did ncw steamship Eiliiil-iii-gli, one of a line of vessels, being il(l\'CI'll\'t'(l to sail on ier first trip about the middle of lleceinbcr. 0000 M'Gti.t. Cot.r.r:Gi-:.—-'l‘lu- inaugural a - dresses of the newly’ appointed Principal, J. W. Dawson, Esq., was delivered at Burnside Hall on Monday last. in presence ofthe Governors, Felloii-s, Professors and Students of the Institution and n fnsliionalile assemblage of ladies and gentlemen. His Honor Mr. Justice Day occupied the Cliair, and introduced the Principal. Mr. Dawson read a long and beautiful address--pointing out the the improveineiits about to be made in the College system, so as to 5l(ltlpt’ll to the necessities and wants ol the times, and eloquently commending it to the favour and patronage of all parents and guardians of youtli.—.Monli'eal Transcript, Nov. 6. Scaacrrr or Houses IN Ennorr..—A correspondent of the Spirit of the Times, writing from Paris, under date of May tllst, remarks on the state of the London horse market as follows:——“ Ladies’ saddle horses are not to he had, neither are carriage horses, which will surprise you. In thir- teen days’ search I could not find a decent pair for sale at any price. Ifthis war lasts another year, the Europeans will be import- ing horses from America, and it would be well worth the attention of our farmers and breeders to raise large horses, lit to draw a heavy carriage, or carry a heavy innn, Good saddle-horses for gentlemen are still to be found by paying for them; a first-rnte one stands you 00.” A Utica (New York) paper states that a gentleman is now in that city purchasing saddle and carriage Itorses for the Paris market.—— Wool Grower and Stock Register. EXPLOSION or Pnori:i.i.im—-—F.iGnr LIVES Los'r.—'I‘he propellor “Finley,” Captain Langley, burst her boiler last Thursday morning off Port Stanley, C. VV. The after portion of the vessel was blown away, and she sunk immediately in ten fathoins of water. Seven men and one we- man were lost. Fifteen saved themselves by clinging to portions of the wreck, until taken off by a schooner.—Quebcc Chronicle A j The locomotive ofa freight train explod- Da. KANE, the Arctic Explorer, is in ed on Friday near Penningtonville, instant- New York, where he has made aI'range- ly killing the fireman. The engineer was Items with an artist,who is now engaged in thrown some distance in the air, breaking the preparation at the maps, charts, plates, the telegraph Wife hi hi5 d°9¢°m—hl3 ‘high! fi,¢,, for hi. gym upon, and for the use of were fractured and he was otherwise in- fig-, Grime], jured, it is feared fatally.-—Ib. t will commence in the ensuing month of .0 Saturday, December 1,1355. Tar MAu.s.—‘I'lic Steamer Lady LeMarchaut did not arrive here from Shediac until Thurs- day morning, at 2 o'clock, owing to the ditlieul. ty she experienced in her u war trip of getting into Bedeque and Shediac arbors on account of the ice. She came in last evening with the Colonial Mails, but we find no news of impor- tance in our Exchanges. A Srascis on the Union of the Colonies and organization of the Empire, delivered by the lion. Joseph Howe, to which is added a Review by the Hon. Francis Iiincks, of Canada, toge- ther with Mr. Howe’s Letter in reply to Mr. llinek’s Review, Pictou, E. M. M‘Donald, 1855 p. p. 69. ' . Joseph llowe, whatever may be the opinion ‘entertained by individuals of his merit_ as _a iolitician, deserves well of these Colonies in general The Speech, which we intend to re- view, in a dillerent. spirit and with a dillerent purpose from that of Mr. llincks, has done more to bring prominently before the British Nation, the political importance ofthe Colonies of North America than any thing that has ever been published in relation to them. The read- ing such books as those of .\lcGregor and Mont- goincry is confined to a certain classs ol' indivi- duals, comparatively few in number, while a brochure like the one in question, especially if, it be the subject of attack, is in every body's, hands, and is likely to produce more discussion ; and consei uently inquir , into the real state oft the Colonies, articular y among member of; both Houses 0 Parliament, than it otherwise‘ would; besides, Clminhers's Journal,—andl whore does it not penetrate-—quotes it on ac-' and though it dilli-rs from i\lr. llowe with res- pect to the re rcsentation of the Colonies in the Imperial arliuinent, it at the same time but he killed ten and injured thirteen of acknowledges their growing importance, and; the necessity there is ofcoining to seine niorel definite line of policy with regard to tbem.t Mr. Joliiistoiie,Mr. llowo's political antago-‘ nist in the Provincial l’arlianient of ’ 1 l\ova luiinds, with better show of argument, advo-. ' czttcs a Federal Union of these North .-\nicrican7 ,Colonics. Mr. llowo. on the contrary, won (I, jhavc them identilicd and iiicorpornted with the; Jay’ 3 H victim 0ff\Vll0l(9 nation, and contends that the coiisolida-r“’"“°5 ‘" 3"l‘l""‘ l""”' P"e‘°"31""‘- ltion of the Empire, by giving to the separate. ' arts of it a representation in the Imperial l’ar- liament. will have the cllect of conccntratiiig the power, resources, strength and wealth of.’ Great Britain, ofniaking her greater and more‘ powerful than she now is, to such it degree, that she will then be able to encounter single- hnndcd the greatest powers of Europe, if not_ the whole world itself. Mr. lloive conceived it‘ necessary to his purpose to prove, that in point‘ of territory, population and wealth, lritish North America was entitled to a diflbrcnt kind‘ of treatment that she has hitherto been subject- to. and he has accordingly given a synopsis of each, and we give the result to our readers as statistical information of the highest iinpor-_ tancc: whether our readers will join with Mr. Ilowe in his aspirations, is for them to say. '5 G :- hopes for the fiiture.— Sir. l wish that my leisure hail been greater, that l nii;_vht have brought bi.-torn you the ripened fruits ot lllt‘l.lllIllllHl, the illustrative stores of his-: tory, which researcli can only at cuinnlati-. In no; vain spirit do 1 wish also, that the seiitin-eats tha,3, lam about in utter might be heard and pondered, not only as they will be by those who inhabit; halt this continent, but by members of the llritishl Pa;-Ii.-int:-1.1, by ImperialStatesmen—b:' the Couii-l cillors who stand around, and by the grttclotts sovereign who sits upon the throne. Perhaps this last, when our sons, standing in our places, train-e ed in the enjoyincnt of public liberty by those who have gone before them, and conipclleil to hestates- men, by tnv Iliiohbtii: oi llti ir liritish ltluml, unit’ the neccssitn s on IlIt'll' position, will on board: across the Atlantic, aml will utter to cacti other, and to all the world, sentiments, which Io-day, Mr. Cliairnian, may fall with an air of novelty upon your car. I am not sure, air, that even out ofthis discussion may not arise a spirit of union and elevation of thought that may lead North America to cast aside her Colonial habiliments. to put on national aspect, to assert national claims, and prepare to assume national obligations. Come what may, I do not hesitate to express my hope that, from this, she will aspire to consolidati- on as an integral portion ofthe Realm of England, or assert her clsinis to a national existence. The at question, Mr. llowo says, that we men 0 the North must put to ourselves, is- We quote the following as indicative of his: ticn by showing that- ICUAII IILIS Canada includes 400,000 New Brunswick 98.000 Nova Scotia 19,000 P. E. Island 2,000 Newfoundland 37,000 ltlat.-ins in all 430,000 Then, as to population- iiuissiraitrs Canada contains 1,842,264 New Brunswick 900,000 N ova Scotia 300,000 Newfoundland 100,000 I’. E. lslsnd 75,000 2,5i7,264 As to the Commercial importance, he gives the following account of the Imports and Ex. ports for 1853- l853:—Canada £8,200,640 Nova Scotia . I,l6~l,l75 New Brunswick, 1852 l,ll0,600 Newfoundland, 1859 795,739 1’. E. Island 298,543 .L'll,499,G97 Let me now turn your attention to the exports of British America. Canada £5,570,000 Nova Scotia 970,780 New Brunswick, 1852 796,335 P. l".. Island 249,675 Ncivfounilland 965,772 And if we add to this amount another million count of the statistical facts disclosed by it. r0l‘ll’.0 value of new ships annually bniltand sold, we may take the whole at £9,545,562. Turn again to the statistical return of the United States for 179i, and you will perceive that I6 years after they had declared their indepeiiileiicc-,theirexports amounted to but $19,000,000 or about half the value of ours. ‘"9 bee” ""l’°l"l°d '1 "‘""'"lS5l“" m m’ Scotia. has, with great ability, and, to our: "9ih“3“d"°1‘35t0l7l|ell'R8Ven|l0-— But, it may be sai-l, if you are going to look like ii Naiion——if you wish to put on the aspecfof a great combined people. you must have some re- Well Sir, look at the revenues of these Provinces under taritfs reinarkalily low. (Janada collects £l,053,026 Nova Scotia 135,000 New Brunswtck 180,000 I’. I1}. lsland 35,345 Newfoundland 84,323 1:1,-179.544 We raise this amount now, without any extra- ordinary effurt, with a very ineflicient force to collect ii——-without .’tllyltOIl_V feeling that it is col- lt:‘Cll’tl. We shall follow this up in a future Number. - .. _ — -~:— _ _ .___) llis Excelleiicy the Lieutenant Governor in Council has been pleased to nppoitit Mr. John llninsay,ol' 'l‘onnsliip Number liighlecii, 'l‘own Road, a Com- tnis.-iniier for the recovery offiinall llebts for Prince- toivn ltoyalty, in the place of Janies Beuristo. l'Isq., resiglied. Warrants from No. 252, of the datccfllie 20th of/tpiil, I855, to No. 3ll, ofthe date of the 20th of April, I855, (both inclusive), will be paid at the Treasury on demand, together with the interest due 1 icrcoit. Married, the 27th Noseniher, by the Rev. ’. lr On ’l‘ae.~‘d:iy, .Jolin Carroll, carpenter, to illlr. l‘hel:in, l'. l y . . , .\l'.Clt' M h‘, ld. il: l It“. may "M be‘ 3 ‘ii I b”l“’V'3 ‘hill "'9 day "3 ‘Wt ‘ll’-E \l;illiaiiial\ldiiih0y, btiliiir,’nlloofeCliarli:Iel‘ii?v|vnl’ r At Lrtuncliing Cllapel, on the lath instant, by the ‘ Rey. I". J. McDonald, Mr. John Mcliiniion, to Ca- roline ltlcllni-, both of llollo lliiy. tln \VP(ll1PSll-'ly. 2lst instniit, by the szinic, Wr. llonnlul ."l('l'll'Jt!. of ll:-yal Spring, to CtlllIf|I’lltt'. se- cou.t tloiigliter of the late Mr. Alexander l\lc|lonald. oflllooniliel . ‘TL’, Died, At Indian River, Lot 18, on the llth November. Mr. Roderick McLellan,'aged 76 years. Passengers, In the Steamer Lady Leblarchsnt, from Richibuc- toil and Shediac, on the 28th—L. I‘, \V. Desllrissy, Esq., Miss Miller, Messrs. Graham, Capt. Powell. J. Wise, J. Stewart, E. Knight, S. McDonald, J. Wilson. ln do. from Pictou, to Cliarlottetowu, 30th Nov. John A. M‘Dona|d. Messrs. ’l‘hos. Clay, Robert Barker, John Douglas, Joseph llawk'tns,Jchn Cahtll, J. B. Waddel. John Cullen, Hudson, Compton: Mrs. Wishart, Capt. Wm. Johnson, Capt. Malcolm Nicholson, and seven in the stserags.