ge es: i Sper tee te 6 i. amte-cthnesage nage ee — -~ $45 THOR BXABIBER,. tee, 2 ums, —— item nee SVR AXLLUTD PANS OTE De a. there is the incidental harrasa of the edi-| portant. Trade.in the British. Islands, tor’s oflice—to have a train of thoughtland on the Continent, is repre ‘utinio by the uncer appearance}, . . cutinio by the unceremonious appearan being in a depressed state. The eccles-! Pithe dovil® ey ae ‘ompro- Siar aeat cout” bee lo istun- iastieal affairs of Britain, and the late} moned from the editorial “den” to be, appointments by his Holness the Pope. overwhelmed by the patronage contain ©) continue to be the principal subjects of | in the promised purchase of aext WeCK S| 4: usion inthe public journals, paper, provided the letter, signed A) cre rh . , . e* ° ’ close. The feelig at Berlin is warlike; masses of Russian troops are moving westwardm The latest news from Vienna ‘is tothe 10th inst.; all warlike. ‘The troops are fast concentrating to- wards the northern frontiers, and Austria BRO Ne ta aottinhanieadigaeees —. migr letter, nD the SANE paper, sirned “A s sented as ue is even said that the Austrian Auibass-' rp, nanan.” treete all jador has demanded his passports. Large s- | 1°82 BUDposed benefite with ridicule. It is not With the good intention of the Secretary that we are about to disagree, althongh the the igrapuy of his letter ight, perhaps, have ‘ . ee ; . pee ae \ » he . ipergists in demanding the dissolution of "©" revised for the better—but hig cab Constant Reader,” is inserted therein.| Mr, Disraeli has published a manifesto | the League aud the recognition of the culations being in error, if not contradig. eountenancing mewly consututed Frankfort diet ier ed, inay tend very seriously to misleag An efleacious wet biansat aShaEe UP"| accusing the Whigs of g ’ yf " ~ and nels de- : : ,iR : on the unfortunate eC itor t Ss iE ithe distasteful policy of lis Holiness!] composed in the very throes of composi-| . _ Bie . tion. No wonder that the editor ean so} The new Archbishop, and at least one o seldorm be seen—no wonder that his mind | his prelates, acknowlédge the whole affair is sometimes bewildered as to rte rece meeen pensar approved of by the contributor and which class of readers he| _ t Cabi Hin’ heg:??O0 de aall please, or rather displease, this being | Present Cabinet some mus mn the almost inevitable result, should he) 2owever, difficult to magine how the won m momen to let; _ ord) Premier could have assented to a scheme ‘ Ia the provincial ec 8 toil; Sick) ’ ie ore ote yeeremestat iwhich he now condemns. and well, inclined, and — disinclined, in joy and saduess, whether mauled ina; The storm is evidently increasing in controversy, or annoyed by some critic intensity. Apparently the foundatious of who has discovered that there is an “ e”| turned up side down inthe forty-fourth. lineo f the fifth colume of the eighth page. their centre. The movement will neces- lic must work in all seasons, and under carjly wake up the English Church to a -— | d mi ‘ all. creamptangés lrenewed exertion. An English contem- “He never tires nor stops to rest, ‘porary, staunch in his orthodoxy and ee CANE SEE EO geen” Jiberal in his polities savs:—* In denying except, indeed, to die; and then. nine ‘the religious supremacy of the crown, the times out ef ten he dies, poor man, in Roman Catholies do nothing but what is harness. — Tail’s Magazine. done by all classes of l’rotestant dissen- ‘ters—nothing but what they and their A Jensy Lixo Inctpent.—During ancestors have done for centuries, Grant Jenny Lind’s first visit in New York, a ing, as we must grant, that the manner m Swede called and sent up a note in his which the new Roman Catholic bishop- native language, requesting to see her, ricks have been named, is offensive to She did not remember the name as she Protestant Englishmen, we totally deny read it, but when the young man came in that it affords any ground either for reviv- she at once remembered his countenance|ing old laws of persecution, or for enact- —an old playfellow when they were ing new ones.” : children tozether at school. She in-| The Board of Trade returns for the quired his circumstances. He is a cabi- month of October ere very satisfactory, net-maker, residing with his wife and and tend to establish, triumphantly, the children at Brooklyn. The next day Jen- ‘truth of the free trade theory. Por the ny Lind drove overand made the wife of nine months ending Oct. 10th, 1850, the her school-fellow a feng visit. Just be- exports were £50,280.402, against £44. fore leaving the city for Boston she went 830,414) for the corresponding period | again. The husband was not at home of 1849. omer She gave to the wife a note forhim—he| Strong hopes are entertained in Eng- opened iton his return —it contained a land that flax may profitably be substituted sweetly worded request that le would for Cotton. allow her ta give tobis children a me-| The Ball has been opened on the; mento of their fathers school friendship Continent by the collision of the Prussian with Jenny Lind. The ‘memento’ was and Bavarian oatposts. The encounter acheck for ten thousand dollars. ‘took place near Fulda, and resulted in : —_——- ithe repulse of the former. The Austrian ‘and Prussien Ambassadors remaining ‘nnreealied, hopes are entertained that a society are on the eve of being shaken to A FeorwipaBLe Muissiux.—h. Lag- Prussien furces in Baden are being grad- ually drawn northwards, ‘to our surprise | . o . . z s we hear nothing of the garrison ai Mauy- ence. Upon a review of all the circum- stances, we are stil! of opinion that, unless Prussia is ready to submit to the harsh, the almost ignominions terns dictated to her, war will ensue. tier indiciston contrasts favorably with the peremptory tone adopted by Austria. King of Prassia seem individually desir- ows to try which is the best man in the field. The Morning Chronicle notices a arumour that Lord Normanby is about to leave the French Embassy and to be ap- India. ‘The cholera is raging at Cephalonia. Out ofa thousand cases five hundred have terminated fatally. {t has not, and never fever is duing great damage there, Parliament has been further prorogued from Thursday last to Tuesday, the 17th December Mr. Gibson,(the celebrated sculptor, who resides at Rome, has received the commission for the statue of her Majesty, to be placed in the new Palace of West- minster. Ministers intend, immediately afier the re-asseinbling of Parliament to introduce ameasure for the extension of the elec- toral qualification in cities, boroughs and counties. THE GOVERNORSHIP OF P. E. ISLAND. The following curious announcement appears inthe St. John (N. B.) Courier. {Much as we might-wish the information to be true, we cau place no reliance upon it, for we believe the Colonial Minister has too many seekers for office in Eng- rland to satisfy, without calling upon Mr. rango, an apothecary at Lorient, in Fraree, has invented a bullet whi been tested by a government commission. which it was directed, exploded with a detonation as loud as that ofa gun from which it was fired, and. produced a most destructive effect. It bursts instantly on striking any object which opposes re-, sistance, whether it be earth, woot, or, ; stone. A't the conclusion of the trial the “hereby the war in the Duchies was to ; members of the commission addressing be put an end to by force. ‘Phe liberal ‘ournals, which in epite of plain facts, man eager to measure his sword with his brother German. Austria, backed by Russia, appears quite resolved ta carry the inventor, said, * Sir, your name onght. : " J ; Iny the whole blame ef the war upon lected to undertake the onerous duties of to be inscribed amongst the members of Be ics oe | Austria. give out that Russia has stipu- ch. has German suicidal war ek< be piles | ange or any other distinguished Colo- ‘Count Beandenburg, whose wise counsel), . , ‘ inearly four ti a ee ih iate odin dahihedd _ be ‘nist, to take the vacant governorship of nearly four times the amount set dom yach:t iking the object against gas nt ly aes eo aes Liane ie > Each bullet oo striking t yere gee ‘ing peace, is dead, Prosssia has at)this Island. Even were it offered to Mr. i : . ; ‘zt as “ i . present 400,000 men under arms, every: Howe, we are pretty sure he would not) ibese erroneous statements or Mie leave his own Province to accept it: Our London correspondent furnishes us out the terms of the treaty of Bregens, witha scrap of very interesting informa- tion, purporting to be the latest on di at the Colonial Office, and that is, there: ‘is a probability of a Colonist being se- \Governor of Prince Edward Island—an The young Emperor of Austria and the) pointed to the Governor-Generalship of has, penetrated into Greece; but asevere } ; ‘the unwary. He states thata sample of Carrots were left at the Society's {elfign, tharty bushels being grown on the thine first part of an acre, which would be %p bushels per acre ; if valued at Is. 6d, per | Pare the amount would be £63 os, after deducting £6 63. for seed, manyp and /abour. This last calculation ag tp the cost of manure and labour is go “erroneous, that we feel ourselves called ‘upon to pat the public upon their guard against relying upon it without matory consideration. Our calculation is, that to procureg large a crop, the land must be in very superior tillage. It will require at leap two ploughings, and: one harrowing ip the fall, which at 7s. each will ainount 14s.—50 loads of good manure to th acre, and we know that every load of mauure well decomposed, and turned, i worth 5s. in the yard, or if thet is to much say 4s.—50 loads at 4s. wold amount to £10—the carting out 4 spreading would be worth eae ing the drills 5s., drilling 2s., horse-hoe- ing, say three times, 9s., then setting ot the plants, which cannot be done a tur nips with the common hoe, but rust be performed by hand weeding—this woul cost 30s.; then comes the digging at cost of another 30s.; then the carting slip or market, say three or four miles, (20 bushels in each cart, at 3s. per load (supposing, as stated in the Secretary’ letier, thete were 930 bushels to theaen| ‘this expense would amountto £7,mh ‘ing the expense altogether, for manure ‘ond Jabour alone, without calculating ty ‘cost of the seed, amount to £22 ise by the Secretary. lealculations we think should not be pu ‘before the public, more particularly whe ‘they proceed from Head Quarters. But perhaps we are in error all this ume, for in again looking over the See- retary’s letter we find the carrote speaks of were of the early Horn Spetie: the Peace Congress, for after vour inven- : aa re a ee - ‘ i andi Isted to assist Austria, and the Russian office at this time requiring a man tho- if so, nobody shouid doubt the amounts tion it will be impossible to think of mak- ‘ ; ” » acaarte tt wit}, treop « war.” M. Lagrange asserts that with t me Sig, ® pe ore ‘eary, so a3 to leave the whole of the a gun bort armed with four pieces of OOP A cise Cirteh how ereons with Prencis non, he could sink a ship of 120 guns in| ANStrian forces lee | r 20 minutes. I[feis in treaty with the? Prossio. who in fact is left alone. sovernment fur the sale of his secret. i . : i 4s : CIN | Saxony is arming, and will, no doubt, A Beavutirvus Exeressep Tuovanr. wishes of a Colonial populatioa. Our correspondent surmises that a pro- . . eis ‘ 7 ; ox . > j Y co f Flanover stands aloof. and refuses to joinjminent member of the Neva Scotia ix. | early Horn Specie. ‘ecutive will be most likely called upon jto assume. the distipguisiable position— ‘tnke the side of Austria and the Diet as one fully. competent to manage and. now reconstituted, and thus Prussia is'arrange the disputes now agitating and| s are to cecupy Gallicia and Hun-lroughiy conversant with the wants and sere of them might be worth, and | | properly cultivated next year, this sam which we see iso this year caleulated in silver, may Wit! ‘equal propriety; be calculated in and an unheard of amount of seal Tt is difficult to conceive anything more : a Et : : a C ; -f. ; . placed in a position of contumacy against threatening that fine Colony. ‘To us it! gathered from this early Horn Speat: beautiful, thant the reply given by one in) P affliction, when he was gsked how he,tte powerat Frankfort, which, two years bore itso well. “It lightens the stroke,” 2% she encouraged perform such mad sail he. “to @raw near to Him who freaks. Phe calling out the Landwebr handles the rod.” jtakes all the best officers, and about 000 imen, fro Gen. Willisen’s army in the NR | Duchies, a pretty plain proof that Prussia yf a fo fk YD ai 3 il {>} !might have put astop to thatawar long ~ a wa ed o ad wt hd 8 geo if she had pleased. thr ++! Pee oe news. pee oe vat r Ri. . Qx& \onarters of the Prussians at Vaca. The Veduesiday, Becember 4, 1330. oe to Cassel is open to the Austrian and SS | Bavarian troops, but, upon a careful sur- : 71 ‘vey of an “ ordnance map” of Germany, News by the English Mail. we coincid? with the opinion expressed, cag that the retreat of the Prussians arises The Royal Steamship Europa arrived) ainly from a strategetic caution, as the at Halifax on. Wednesday, last, the 27th|troops in Hesse Casvel could not risk a ult., in J14 days from Liverpool. She mitted on all sides, that the aflair of ‘would not be a matter of surprise to find ; en ‘that the Hon. Jeseph ilowe’s mission to Downing Street, ostensib} zon the subject of the Great Railway, should be in sume measure connected with the appointment man himself wonld prove to be the fay- oured individual.—Si, John Cour. en AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY. nee Wr observed in the Royal Gazette of the 26th ult., under the head “Original Correspondence,” a letter from the Se- cretary of the Royal Agricultural Socie- general action, It seems, however, ad-jty, shewing the benefits the Isiand_ is receiving through their instrumentality, ‘Oh ' potent Beer, put a doable X for the |fatare to thy signature, for who em my after this that thou art small! Keep iwriting for the good of thy nd in question, or that the honorable gentle- | ..untry. and we will provide thee oh u . re > motto tofag to thy Hlustrious name” non valeo—(I am willing ut apable)- Communicated, We copy from the Gazette the letter signed “A Townsman,” referred to the first part of the above article. jrbat was our Royal Brother thinking about when he permitted his gem and especial patrons of the Royal Boe’: —s Maiis for this Island arrived here in the Rose on Monday. The news is unin-| had a very boisterous passage. The | rasse might be settled by German med)- ation, but that Rusaia is resolved that the Holstein business shalibe brought to a in the importation of Stock, é&c.; and strange.as it may appear, the very follow-!Gazette! El tu Brute 0 be quizzed in the sedate and | e! must have pera,