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[No title]
PIN'S Tumi MO. There was a second great meeting in Exeter-hall on the subject of this work lat week.— None (If the Catludic Bishop s nor Priests attended tü defend lLl:II1,t,ht:s from the barge tlf countenancing; this work BOr any one 011 tlu-:r behalf. A person named .Murphy attempted yy4''1',1' disturU.nce, but he was ejected, I in 1 w m 1 in oi .U i \—Tin* day of bad blood "lId ram o/otis chug tu the sister kingdom has itad it.s ,idilll:- this ear, also, although it went off 1¡!(II"e tranquil ILil1l was wont to be/ In Belfast, there was s, ,ions Iîtlllll ..tllll\ um. thrown by till t >i a in; i- pat t_v tit tin. no hi. in ,w ho tired on them t:i JI..{\dJ,
Advertising
7g THE ROYAL UOTKI., C li ESTER- To Tourists ?nd Families. ■ |< MMII ll> <i.»l (iKXri.KMI-A travelling inio ;ui,l from -\OK 1 ii WAI.I.S, IIIEI.AND, I.I- \I,IIIHH)I„ V. A M' 111> '1-0' ^l'- Xt" ,.<)..?.u?intor?dti?'?):'?A.H'?' ('m.?M!. ??sui..n?..c..m,n?.oat.rthe \ob,ty.U?.try,?K)thci'ubi.c..?'?L Tho \.xtcn,ivcsuit?ot'.UHe?dsn..??'H? Rooms, with the Mcutkntt?m.oums. render tli.» a most desirable S» r .MM; H>H no trouble or expense liavim; been spare-il to render every department ot Iv-tablisl.incuL replete with eolnlort. U^tsffld L.winis of the first quality, wth a well stored I-AIIOM., always carefully selected. A pa('ioll ('nH H Hoo)l, with the l.ondon and 1 10- vincial Papers, ami an excellent COMMFWIAI. J!»OM fur (.'umniercia! (lenlleineii. The Mansion of Ea.ton Hall. Families and Gentlemen staying at this ilut?l have the privilege of visiting KJTUS Ham., the splnald seat of the'"Marquis of Westminster, during the season. Kvery deseiiption of Carnages always ready toi t.u U The Proprietor begs to return his grateful thanks to those Families and Gentlemen whu have so liberally and hand-oa ely support him sin -c lie opened the alJ(\\c Iv-tabli-iiment. -Moderate Charges In C\CT) hranch of the business, combined witb careful and at. tensive serv ants, form one ot the great fe;.taic? ot trii> II0IIse, awl for whieh the ProprieCtor eonttnaes daily tu receive the thanks of llis visitors. (iiXUlGK STIU TTOW lioyal Hotel, ( hotcr. Freehold Estate-Denbighshire. TO HE SOI 1) BY AUCTION, Jh :\1". Ovtiniis, At the Wim 1 l.OV 1" in RCIUIN.OII Tut nsn iv, the ?h??v' (It ;k, lt335, (.tKf<M.'<?'f''4?; ?l ,1 c i.v, '.is 'i'I'>i ci jtressi d) at 4 0 clock in the alter- noon, ill such lut, awl subject to such conditions as shall thell be declared ;— Valuable Fli KKI 101,1) ICSTATF., situate in the V centre of the picturesque and justly adm red Vale ii t'CI wiiil, Oll bot II ides of the Turnpike ltoad k-iduig trom Hulhilll\) Denbigh, "ithin two miles of the fur- mer and i? ofth? latter c.msistini; of four compact Farms,called IH'AR I'lIK, IUi YM'AREDIG,l'KN- y-)!KYX,f")I'K??'"AV! confining n.houmo Acres of Aral/le, '1/'adow, awl Pature Knnd, ÜJ the parishes of l.lanynys and Mandyrno^. ') here ?;tn'' ??iLnt\Vatt.r Corn Mill attached to which hns lately been put into thorougV repair, and can always command a plentiful ,upply ufwakr. ?'['? are "??.nn(; tli, i, i, f 0:?k the latter of which pre- sents a most admirable itnation for Building, a it commands an uninterrupted view uf the entire ale. There is a neut Cottage Pvcsidenee at Puarthe. All the Farm Buildiug, arc iu good repair, ami the Land in the highest state of cultivation. The above are well worth the attention of any per- son desiring an eligible and secure investment. Further particulars llIay be obtained (if by letter, post paid) from the Auctioneer, at Ruthin, or of Mr. Jons ROr.tUT:-i, Solicitor, Ruthin, at whose Oliice .Maps of tlie Property may be seen, and the Property may be viewed on application to .Mr..Ions -MADD.K KS, liachymbyd-bach, near Ruthin. A Sarins >>1 Mites b,,t Dublin and London. STEAM COMMl NICATION Carnarvon, Dublin, Aberystwyth, and Liverpool. < i J r"- -5 • •• THE pTtorniETons OF THE PRINCE LLEWELYN, VALE OF CLWYD, & AIR STKA.MKUS, R1 SIMX'TFl-'f,f, inform tl:e Public, that the following are the Sailing Arrangements of these Packet* for JII.Y and Aeoesr, hv vvhieh a direct t-oinmunieation will be opened between J)tTHd\ and NOU TII WALKS, as well as between NORTH and SOl/TH WALKS "ALE OF C'LWYD CorHnrron to Dublin. Saturday, July 25, 9 Thursday, July 30, 9 Tuesday, Aug. 4, 9 Saturday, Aug. 8, 9 J: Tuesday, Aug. 18, 9 S aturday, Aug. 22, 9 Thursday, Aug. 27, 9 7?MM<,)<"MrMar!"K. Wcdnesd. July 22, 9 Monday, July 27, 9 F?).)y.Ju)y3? 9 Wdn?).A?.5; <? Monday, Aug. 10, 9 Js FridayAug. 14, 9 < Wednesd. Ai?.]'t.9 "Monday, Aug. 24, 9 Fr.hv; Au?.aH," FAIII-:S. c.v ni n in ck. Carnarvon to J)uulin .0-, Od. 4s. Steward's Fee 0 6 .0 Four-vv heeled Carriages, £ 1. Is. i Gigs, IU. OÙ.; Horses, 10s. (id. Families travelling between Dublin and London will save by these arrangements from J5. to £10. in post- itig, c*c., Carnarvon being the same distance from ('apel C'urig as Pangor. Carnarvon to Liverpool. Thursday, July 23, 7 Saturday, Aug. I, 7 Thurday, Au?.6?7-" Tuesday Aug. 11, 7? A,.g. 15, 7 T?.<n'.Ai? 2(? ¡ Tuesday, Aug. 25, 7 ,Iu, 2!1, 7 Liverpool tu Carnarvon. Friday, July 24, 10 Wedne^d. July 29, 10 •Monday" Aug. 3, 10 Friday, Aug. 7,10-* Wednesd. Aug. 12, 10 3 Monday' Aug. 17, 10 Friday, Aug. 21, 10 Wednesd. Aug. 26, 10 Monday, Aug. 31,10 AIR. (Wfwn fel Liccrpool. Tuesday, July 21, 7 Saturday, July 25, 7 Thursday, July 30, 7 'Tuesday, Aug. 4, 7 Tu?i.?,Aug.4,7? I hur^da"v, Aug. 13, 7 -X Tuesday, Aug. 1H, 7 ( Saturday, Aug. 2', 7 t)m?.du?.Au?.27? 7 Carnarvon to Aherysiu uth. I hur*dav, July 23, 9 rm.)?.uty'M, 9 Saturday, Aug, 1,9 | thur.i.?. Tuesilay, Aug. 11, tMMt.<y,Aug.H,H? Thursday, Aug. 20, 9 'Tuesday, Aug. 25, () Saturday, Aug. 2!I, 9 1.irr,.p"o! to Cttrnarron. Wuhns..t,,)y 22, 10 IMondav, July 27 10 M.?')u)v3),)f) 5' 11) .?nn?v,Au,i<);(? Friilay, Aug. 14, 10 Wedncs. Aug. 19, 10 Monday, Aug. 24, 10 Friday, Aug. 28, 10 Aberystwyth ill Carnarvon. Friday, July "W, 9 Monday, Au?.H. 9 Friday; Aug. 7, 9 -? Wednes. Aug. 11, 9^ .?)oH.)ay,An?.)!? 9? hKhv, Aug. 21, 9 W?ncs.Aug.?i.:) -Monday, Aug. 31, 9 Livrerpwl to Inaiunaris, Meinii Bangor,and Jiaugor, iV liriflge. /hv mmnris, l.irecpool. Kvery Tuoday.'ThurMlay, Kvory Monday, Wedues- aiid Saturday mornin, tlay.an«lFridavmorning, atHa)f-?t)Oo'c)oc?' at'Mneo'cuck, FARFS. Caiun, DHK. Liverpool to Menai Urid-rc £ 0 10s. lid, 5s. Liverpool to Carnarvon 0 12 0 5 stew aid's Fee 0 0 (» 0 Liverpool to Aberystwyth I 1 O II) Meward's Fee 0 0 tj 0 Carnarvon 10 Aberystwyth 0 12 0 (> steward's Fee 0 I) (i () I lor-esto Menai Hri\lr, 10,,1;.1,; CaniaQe-, tii-s, to.J:>. not including shipping or Ijnditr^, "4.'IjTr.. fWIII LiHrpùlJI tu Abervstwvth stay it i. it 01 t <*inai I I), lb In -,v; cut- iiR-, eve, ni;*y be had va IwaHI. uf the bi >t ijualitv. A- e n «.. he St. (icorgeV Steam Packet ('01nran\, Ht i. 11, Fdcn-ijuay, Dublin: U ater-treet dnd ( lan uce Dock, Liverpoid Mr. Ti.vnum St. (ieorge's ('lIl1i!UI. •_« nt, Menai Piid^c )1. (;IP. f- SJHII t-man 11otel,Carnarvon and to Mr. A. P. D v 115, «1l1¡'ld¡'n r!)h, A "lr\1 Ih. vpcit.-i..an Jlrtd) (,lIlJdJ(rll, Julv, riI All I'. Public art rt^K-r-tfully informed,thatthc Jv\] F nl'TRVSCLW V.N-ISA IS !'()> I I'O.N t.'? TilOS. WILLIAMS. 13th J.1y, 1835. Hotice is hereby given, I F, nA illAT JOHN (UU'.ATHF.I) HARRIS, F>i. i.)m.of his Majesty's Commi"ioners h)rthc Relicl of Insolvent Debtors 11, tl,, F?.,?, day of Ar<.L?. 1(135 at the hour of Ten in t the forenooll preri.ely, attend at the CotBT !lm's> at UOI.OKLLK V, in the county of Merioneth, and hold a Court for the Rcliet of Insolvent Debtors, pursuant to the Statute. Notice is hereby given, rilHAT JOHN CiRFATIlKl) HARRIS, KSQ. ioneofhi?)?..ty'('<.mun.siur.ers for the Relief uf tn?tveut Debtors will, on the SKv?MH day ?f Ai oi ST, 1835, at the Hour of Ten in the forenoon pre- cisely, attend at the Conn Hoi si- at WKLSiil'(>()L, in tin- County of iMoutgoniery, and hold a Court for the Relief of Insolvent Debtors, pursuant to the Statute. BANGOR CLERGY MEETING. Xotice iis hereby titi'?", 'J'II.I1' the tiE\FH.\L ;IAL :lIEETl\(; of the l BC It I J\¡':H of this Charit\ ill take place at the -N IIKINAI. SCHOOL ROOM, in tin- Citv, 011 1 ds 1 "0.iv, thc 5th day of Aniu;T ncxl. J()ll\ III CiliKS, Secretary amI Treasurer. .Y<>, sQ, UEE^AR, c.isri.i: sriiFirr, beacmaius. MESSRS. S. & J. AllOXSON JEWELLERS To their lioyal Highnesses the Duchess of Kent and and Princess Victor i a, ■31' to inform their Friends that tt??y l??,e a ?l i,, I.# colleetion of English, Pienoh, and German Jew- dlery, Plate, Watch??tusiK Oocks and t!ox?. from lour to sis. tunes, Mahogany and Rosewood, Writing Desks and !>re:Îng Ca:el-all the above articles warranted to be of the b!:t manufacture. MONEY. —ready to be advanced 4EI6850. ? upon Freehold, Copyhold, or long Leasehold Property, at a reduced rate of intere>t. £ 13690.—I poii Reversionary or Church Property, t\c. As this lol\(,Y belong to Trn-t pstntes, the .Money may be allowed to remain in the 1 Sorrower's luinds for any number of years. respectable personal se- eurity alone, in Sums from £ 300. £ 500. or not exceeding .f700. upon very moderate terms. Letters, post paid, directed to A. I>. Cornwall-road, London, 11',11 alway, meet immediate and confidential attention. National Schools. FlMfft KXAMIXAT10X of the National Schools .1 of Pangor and Neighbourhood will take place at ¡¡,)If+p3i;t EIt> \'{' 11 in the SCHOOL ROOM, on I'm KSOVY the 6th flay of Auc.rsr, 1835. The Schoolmasters and Mistresses of the several Xational Schools of this and the adjoining countv, are requested (if convenient) to attend the Kxaiiiiua- tion, after which they will Dine together, witllUut all expend; to themselves or the Several Jnstituti\II1:: with which thev are cOllneetel1. R. FOI LKLS, Master of the Pangor National School. PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOW l.KIXiF,. rjVIK RANGOR DIOCLSAN COM.M1TTLK, .B acting under the Society for Promot ng Chris- tian Knowledge, intend holding their ANNl Al. \II:IIJ\(" Jt tllc NVIIONM, SCHOOL ROOM, in this Citv, on WMINI-.SD.IV, the 5th day of AVGCST, 1HI35, at halfpaNt Eleven o'clock in the Foienoon, for the purpose of Auditing the Accounts for the last yv;\r, \c. i\c. The Annual Subscriptions due to the Parent So- ciety, aud the District Dnations anti Subscriptions will be reeeivtd on that Day, together with the Ac- counts due fur the Pooks. J. II. CO TTON. Secretary. TO liE SOLI) BY AUCTION, At the (ion IIOTM in the Town of C UIN.VJIVON, 011 SATI'HIMV, the between the hours of 3 and 5 o'clock in the afternoon, subject tú such eonùitiuns as shall be then produced, unles< disposed of in the JI1tan timc by Ini, ate contract, 01 which due nuticc will be given :— ALL that modern built DWELLING-HOl'SK, AL,ittiit(? on Segontium Terrace, in the Town of Carnarvon, in the occupation of Mary Jones. All those Six DWELLING-HOi'.SKS, situate in New-street, in the said town of Carnarvon, in the several occupations of Mr. Uohert llumphreifs, Xehe- miah Ihacegivdle, William Jours, John Jones, John t.vnns, and }/lllll Hughes. A)) those Three DWELLING-IIOL'SES, situate in Chapel-street, in the said town of Carnarvon, in the several occupations of Robert 1'arry, Kvan Williams, and John Morris, and— All that D\Y'ELLING-JIOLSK, situate in Pridge- street, in the said town of '?"?"?"t' of Morgan Jones. The last mentioned Dwelling-house is held under a lease granted in the year 1824 for one lile, now age" I 12 and 30 concurrent year, at the reserved rent uf sixteen years. For further particulars apply to Mr. Roiu ui W11.- I.IAMS, Solicitor, C a r ria i-voil or Mr. II. R. WILLIAMS, Solicitor, l'eurho<, near Carnarvon.
-..-.THK KING'S LKVKK, \c.
THK KING'S LKVKK, \c. His Majesty, attended by Sir Andrew Barnard, arrived in town 20 minutes before two o'clock on Friday afternoon from Windsor Castle. Ihe Duke of Cumberland received the King it St. James's Palace. The King held a Levee at two o'clock, which was attended by the Ambassadors and a great concourse of the nobility and gentry. The fbllo?i?g p,?,?td addre"es to the King — The Archbishop of Canterbury, from the Archdea- con and Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Cleveland, praying his Majesty nottosauction the appropriation of any portion of Church property to other uses than thos of the Protestant Church and from the Clergy of the Deanery of Croydon, to same oftect. The Bishop of Lincoln, from the Archdeacon and Clergy of the Archdeaconry of Pedford the Arch- deacon of Huntingdon, and Clergy of the County of Hertford belonging to that Archdeaconry and from the Clergy of the division ot 1I..1\:lIId, ii. II, County of Lincoln, against the application of the Ecclesias- tical revenues to other purposes than those of the Established Church. The Duke of Richmoud, from the Archdeacon of Chichester and Clergy of tlit, Deaneries of Poxfirove and Alidhurst, and the city of Chichester anti ils vi- duity, praying his Majesty to refuse his sanction to tho proposed measures affecting the Church ot Ire- land; and frm th? Archdeacon of Chichester, and Clergy ofth Deaneries of Arundel and Stomngton, tu the same t>tJt}ct. 'fl. Ard.hish"p of Armngl., from the !ry of fl". diocese of I.t.ic;hlil1 and Irom tho Minister Bud JIl. habitants of the parish ofMoshel, county of Kilkenny.
[No title]
CASK OF HvmimMiom CrniJ>.—We have the great- est satjfilction in announcirw the 'H'c(:4ul treatment of a decided case of hydrophobia which has occurred in this neighbourhood. A female, in the establishment of John Griggs 1."s(1. of Missing, was bitten in the arm by a favourite dog, which had been ill three or four days, an,1 continued indisposing until a week afterwards, when it was killed. About four days after the female lias bitten she exhibited slight symptoms uf hydropho- bia she became averse to foed and drink, (LIlli was affected with pains in the head and throat. In this slate she continued about 10 day^, when the symptoms increased to an alarming degree, and the patient expe- rienced all the horrors usually attending this dreadful malady. Mr. Yarentie, of Kelvt-don, was first called in, and afterwards Mr. Tomkin. of Withaui, through \\hu"e united exertions thr recovery ef the patient has been accomplished. The latter l'ntklllan excised the part, bitten, an,1 the operation had the iUllucdialectli:ct /If reducing the inflammation of the arm, which had becomeewremely p,liuful; fWIII thai period the patient became l'ahn, and has been since gradually recovering, and is now pronounced to her pennam ntly cured. We 11 ust that the public will Ii.. fa v. ured vv i¡h.1 partial I ir o'cmiat 011:11 in .;tnu al pui -u« d i!1 -<> :11'pl,j I. ,\I.
[No title]
if IPf the t'ofloiving places in the ensuing « i. '-f' I: .¡ DAYS. J I || f f| Dlls. == 1:- >"j ê ? H l | ff 2 5 S. I; I ¡; J 0- f 7 7 T?.s..?' '<! ?' T'O'?T?'? 0 4 jO :¡ ''J* \V<.[.? Pftti)?.?!) 71i 18 4 M» Thurs./J,*3 7 i>6 7 3o 6 k> 4 ?i.?.? 8 -14 8 *1 1 ? S4 7 6.J. (¡ ,,4 a iir t) )2 ) ,) I 8 ?t<))f 7 ji I '2 Sunday Wi 10 20 110 0 I 9 10 |H 1° '1 7 .4?" 9 10 ¡¡ 1U Mon .J7 tl 8 ilO -«> | 9 .,3 11 -1« 9 10 »,, u>
TO COHRESl'O:\!Hsr:,:,
TO COHRESl'O:Hsr: T h tter on 511",rt /flll'I/S in our last page.
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-SIATI: OF PAIITIIS.—The limits fixed by the [florin Act for the observance of preliminary no- tices, lire »t liiinJ the Registrations will follow; ami then, a truce with those spirit-stirring appeals which have been teelllitl from the Press for several successive publications, with the laudable intent of arousing into activity the dormant ener- gies of the freeholders on the subject of rates and taxes. Touching the hopes and achievement ot 1hat party which, in a spirit of exclusiveness, ar- rogates the title of J.ilie.al—we mean not to lower the one or to enumerate tht other, but shall even abide their own bulletin of the affair, be the same more or less-ititd if, through prmkntiul motives, the information be withheld, we shall console our- selves in the almost certainty that the day of rtckoning is not i-i i-.il distant. There is no obstruc- tion, however, to appropriating to our own uses, the enemy's estimate of Conservative strength and exertion, and we have much pleasure in extracting from his own columns the important announce- ment that—' the Tories have been at work quietly and sedulously even in districts where there seems scarcely any necessity for exertion on their part. In Shropshire, for example, where the Tories were so triumphant at the last election, and where the influence of Tory landlords preponderates so much, their organization has been perfected with great industry. They have not relied upon their superior strength, but have laboured as if parties I" 1 were nearly balanced, 1 et tile puonc nas nearu little or nothing of their proceedings in that quar- ter. Depend upon it, the Tories are secretly at work all over the cotiiitry-iii the obscure as well as the more important districts. It will be found when the day of trial arrives, that they have re- tailled III most every country attorney on their side. In Nottinghamshire, we have been told, nearly every country attorney has received a retaining lee—generally of ten guineas!" Pretty pickings for tlie Attorneys, we opine. The same unques- tionable authority avers that, I unless the Liberals are on the alert within the next few days, we shall st-e a Tory ministry in power, backed by a majority of the House of COnUlIO!1S, next Febru- ary to this complexion it must come at last.' Last February beheld a Tory ministry in power, un- fortunately without the adjunct-and who can tell what a day or an hour may bring forth I 1\'cxt February may witness not a Tory ministry, which we do not contend for, but an united ministry of Conservatives and constitutional Whigs, backed by a majority of the House of Commons. The ides of March are portentous to usurpers The future is more propilious than the past. The Conservatives had either bent their head lo the Spirit of Keform, or inclined with it they had given up all expectation of office, until the revo- lutionary nWllia shollld have subsided; and, hence their unprcparedness in point of numerical strength to cope with their ungenerous opponents. The aspect of'affairs is now somew hat dissimilar; the native hue of resolution' is stampt upon their various ramifications, denoting II healthy action, and betokening a speedy recovery of lost powers. We arc mislakcll ill our men if they benol prepar- ing the way for I coming events'—although to ac- commodate the Liberals, they shou lei seat them- selves down, like the clowfi in the fable, upon the river banks until il or their patience should be exhausted. Yet, after all, is it so very vital to the Liberals themselves that Lord JOHN and his own familiars should continue to rule the roast, especially when the refonn odour shall have become scentless and (le,t(l.' NN'Iiat'i in a imiiie ? not the rose dis- pense the same fragrance in thelappel of the Con- servative as the Liberal f hir KOUKHT PHI. is pledged to the perfection of every essential reform as to the cutting off root and branch every abuse —and is there amongst the honorable men" who intercepted his brilliant career in a manner socon- sonant with the usages of honorable rivalry is there amongst them a slave so base as to assert thnt his spirit lagged, or veered from his profes- sions I In what therefore has he offended—and why or wherefore should he not be trustetl ? We fain would address ourselves to the common sense of the unthinking crowd, which too often exercises its judgment by proxy, and appeal from Phillip druuk to Phillip so ber. We would have them close their cars to jhe cunningly-devised fa- bles of men who court their sweet voices and ad- dress them in honeyed words in public meetings, but who wilt tiot individually vouchsafe them a nod of recognition, unless indeed at election seasons. What care they for yourselves or)our interests ? for them you may eat the bread of bitterness and quafl the ctil) ofsorrow-it is your i-otes that they care for, for it is worth their while to gather these, lurn aside from factions and factious men, and which con- cern your peace/Hear in mind that"the very qualities which enabled men to acquire power in distenipcred tiiiies, render them, for most part, unfit to be trusted with it. The work which requires a calm, thoughtful, and vigorous spirit, can never be performed by the erufty, the turbulent, and the
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ol: (iuar<luin announces with much apparent satisfac- tion the arrival of several families from the Agri- cultural districts of liuckingham, and their sub- sequent location in the Factories of Derbyshire and Lancashire An effort is further made to in- duce the belief that the condition of the peasants is illlproved-as a lure to the further migration of Agricultuirsts. To our mind's eve, this alter- native presents a melancholy picture, and reminds US of the late of the h?h-n?d..d ,?r. Th?' .h? < Lord s h;n0 no ,erious objection to a„ IIl;\tltl<' 'JI h, allhy agrarian blued \lh u,«r 1.111"1 dried operatives, we can re;ulily imogtne for it would enable them to control that Jiilin-Hnll^li-\ ntss of mind and manner upon which the lower class of Englishmen so pride theuiseUes, by creat- ing a competition of labour, which might likewise operate upon the imgc— but that the migration will answer any good or final purpose, we ques- tion. In the first place, it is impossible that these hardy native plants, reared under the canopy and breathing the pure air of heaven,—it is next to all impossibility at all events, that in this transplanta- tion their nature will undergo that sudden change —that they will become exotics, and flourish in the heated air uf those pyramids of living mummies. Will they not rather spurn the tyranny of task- masters and overlookers, and revert to their own green hills and pleasant fields, perhaps inoculated with the factory plague, the taint of radicalism— in the full conviction that theirs is the worst go- verned country iuthe world. But wltat does the editor mean to imply in the passnge- We look to the wide field for labour which tlic-c iniinuficturing districts aflbid as a most valuable aux- iliai-v with the new poor laws in improving the condi- tion, and thereby re-elevating the character cf the agricultural population of the central and southern and we hope the migration of a considera- ble body of the III honring classes from thence w ill ha ve considerable effect in softening the manller. and re- tining the habits and feelings of our own operatives." How arc we to reconcile this commingling of evils, or look for the results that the character ot the agricultural population will be re-cleratcd, and the manners of the manufacturing operatives softened and refiiied ? You may abase one to the level of the other, or vice versa but you cannot produce mutual benefit. We doubt if the admix- ture will be productive of good to either, for be it remembered I evil communication corrupts good manners and mollify the soil as you will, you cannot produce grapes from brambles. Ardently as we desire that the morals and man- ners of the inmates of the Factory should be im- prOled-and who that has beheld the females in their Sunday apparel, many of them beautiful creatures, with the grace of air and carriage he- titing a lady, and then been disgusted by the ut- terance of some gross and unfemine witticisin- that does not mourn the fate that hasconsigned them to obscurity-we do not desire to see our simple- minded husbandmen, their wives and daughters, initiated into the mysteries of cotton factories.- When the country is relieved from the ruinous con- sequences of l'ree Trading, which will be we expect when the enlightened President who repre- sents the borough of Manchester and the other reciprocity mcn shall have been promoted to the ranks of his Majesty's opposition, we shall find employment for those men in the jicld- Princes and lords may flourish or mav fade, A breath can make them as a breath lias nuul e Itut a bold peasantry, their country's pride, if once destroy tl can never be supplied."
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?,?day last tile f' or(i iiishop of this diocese held a public ordination at he  I W^Vl,eiu'T'iS Scn'lemcn received orders Ih:('s.-I(oh<:rt JOIJ(:s, B. "manuel t olkF". Ca'Lbri,l:;e; JohIJ Jones, A.B. :\e"' Inn ]fall Oxfo,d; ;'nd John Williams, Jesu, College. Oxford th V'1;    I'HII.,1*.—William Mov.l Willi,t I» ,"S College, Oxford; and Willi. I) vid KIt u.U1 rl- Av Je.-us College, Oxford.
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l.o.d Brougham was exoecled in t vc-.sterday to lay the ifr t ■ -ve^ haiiu s 9" I n s 111111, i, u„, t?, I i .? I ?, ? I MEETIXO or Till H.,H"11\c lovers "I mony and natio nal melodv ?ill bear m nnri.i Thursday next is the day appointed f..i i!„ sembling of thq L!ai-i!s lit UU vviun! AM-. I. when various prizes will lie conU-iah Cumbrian Juvenile Harpist "ill "I", sn, u n.juH)ht'Ut;t;?:io"??-)'?/. COM UI I' *r C.VISN vi:v«,\—\VT. p.ni m inted biUs that Mr. Walsh meditates an aj.p the svmpathiesot the inhabitants of ( dl'II. se,tibli,)Igof tl- !u ;n mestic aifiiction lately, and lias a lar.e 1" support, which will we trust, )"? ja?:.b?r<:c':?)t!o?. ?'t)?i!d?)t?tt)i!.h. provided a very tolerable fund of i iitert.imin .Master Ridyard is a capital fiddle-hand-aml i will be some excellent lomic s iujinv: bv n:ni: of the theatrical company now IH.rt: Beaumaris. DoI.ctl.l-l Y.-< >11 the l;nh Iii>t:u,t tlx |I, tatlts of Doluell.-v wi ii- all:\iù,: to shew ,¡ to Mr. Jones V\ iili.uns and Mis, |(,,herN occasion of their marriage. The h. jls rM, i-ily during the day, a hand uf music town, and a large party of gentlemen tlii.nl Ship Inn; L. <)- Kdvvards, h-q i<kA th. and 1). Kvans, I-s(l. -ofti, i;it,.d The greatest hilarity was kqtt u|> t».l,u (l A party of sixty ot the trall,>,u"" «■ r* dined at the Brown Horse, in relchi-Mim, "I event. Parties also dined at Mr. I.V.P .1 IJt nisa'rdre, and at the Skinner's Ann>. At n the town was generally illumim.led. ai <1 -• •. bonfires blazed away on the neighlKniriii*: i it!> A lively interest seemed to be felt on the bride and brid",rooiii,atidtittir fiti,iii.. i,1 long known in, and connected with the imvt neighbourhood.—The following £ nt:lyni<in written in honour of the event:— Pa beth yw y blodtl¡a'1au,- pa ad."s Oruchel gan clychau Van a roed 0 dan vr iilU, A diddan bood eu Ilenftych j'r dinyeh win- wr If" ad-3, Rhyglyddol gyfreithiw 1 Xi I,i,iff gwau gam iiH y „v r, Va hollawl yw-nitl twylUw. « Cyfoeth a.phob dodvvyddyd a ij'l.iiit A gwiwlau sereha\Ygtd J Hood eu hoes ddiloes hytryd, t )Jcb 1111 bocn YllIa yn y byd. A deued iddynt, diau,-— femlithii n A dethol rinweddau; Pall ant o'r byd, ddtMvrfryd dd;ui, Xef wed yn I'W heneidiau. LIVE HOUSE ANI> VOI'I r. (il-¡- (;1. • ;■»«. since Mr. Baugh, the ayent ftll tl.c* himibi t-iiii quarries, lost a valuable hone hom fu> pustuic After a lapse of seven days it w a, di>cuvcr. «l ai a quagmire, but the only vi-ible part Lcin; II. It I" supposed to have been thus eii^ulphed Im time it was missing to being luund. Willi >01, j culty it was rescued. It 1.1 recclHd nu mji, few days restored it to its accustomed vigour,«»:. t now doing well. ACCIDENT.—A few days since, as some lal- were employed in pulling down the old brid,. the Seiont, near Carnarvon, a poi tiun 01 it felt of them i one sustained a compound frutturt leg, and the other was injured in tl.o spine. 'I' geon Haslam was cal ?d in, and WC UIUKTSI.H. men are doing well. MINUS A LIMB.—On Friday last,s>tl.<j 1/ coach was on its way from !Jul"IH:<1.i l». hr",1 when nearing this city, one of the out-id. p 1 — who had been engaged in conversation UIlI. a for some time, discovered, on looking about tn., «, all was right,that he had lost a leg i hell f up, but-?.J)<<er-fun to tell !—the ah-entiLem!- iton Pt inventus. It was in all probability IIIJ1.: behind. The ratastrophe produce.1 a 1,0.] merriment, and the denuded wight on arrivn,. gor had to be carried to a joiner' s shop, vv lur* stitutc wa prov ided, awl he was sút upon hi* more. There is in Traits and SUIrhtiO!l" Irish peasantry" an humorous relation of th of a pair of legs, which traversed the couutry, ditches and trd.1..cring IUOCS, without 30; Ii, incurring a tlavv ur a speck upon the ilk hw which they were encased, awl at len-jth quictlv down in the old Abbey of (lrm""d, where II 4; the body was deposited and we now »u»pc« 11:. some truth in tbe legend—(which represent- tw.«: | lords as rivals for the hand of a daughter oi tiiau house, the favored one of which was the 1""l'r: the peregrinatory legf; his rival decreed his Jotru and in order the more securely tn carry it into, he prevailed on him to drink to intoxication, retiring to his ,ouch he threw himself on .t legs where his he.td usually reposed hi? riu. in the night, and unmaking the former for the cut them clear off, awl cast them into the n" for many years after, the legs made an annua mage to the tom b i i will .ff.?, ti?, break loose after this fashion, there is no telling L whol., country may be stocked with legs. L.VIMKS' JKSN.LS.—CALHON,—On Tuesday a well dressed lady was proceeding down W itt St., an ass was observed to kick up hi. heel" a1 a most sonorous Yeehuu Ycehaw! Yeehan « at the top of his speed down the street. Rt turned round, and seeing Seddy dashing alun" rently intending to carryall before him, she 1* frighted, to the other ide of the street, to t his way. The donkey tacked in his course, sed over too, which the lady 110 .uoner i'fI"IH'! she gathered up her garments, and M-aiiijx iW with all her mIght, amid shout" .1 laughtm 1,? spectators. The relentless ass still gave ch.i«c.t to the fair fugitive with an occasional YetLi* length he came up, and seizing her by that piv posterior deformity which ladies call the skirts of her gown and under garments f,irl, from the body '■ The embarra>sn»eat and coiilu* indeed the absolute .tate of fright--into whi»- lady was thrown under such circuinAtancc-, n more easily conceived than described. I,? behind,allll escapcd half denuJcd into one of 'U leaving a stream of brownish powder to mark IIee besides a consIderable quantity that hud h«-« n t pated by the lirst assault of the donkey. 1110' of this extraordinary scene was now oln'ou*. lady's bustle was stuffed with bran an.1 the- j* who had hat! a long series of Itanyan 1 lav>, aL no better tare than hard knocks and thistl;" COL resist the temptation to treat hillldf to a niout farinaceous food, eVen though to be uh!,Jiul"j ot storming a lady's bustle! Our fair country would grieve exceedingly if Nature had I",J. with one of these dromedarv apP¡lJd,L .• <5 backs; but if they, to whom .Nature sylph like form, will thus disfigure t!i< »a-cUo. will at least do well not to stud" their bustlr bran or oatitieat There i* more than onek»cu- ed and hungry donkey in < heater!—Cht -u- ('I,, HOKIUD CASI; OF H VHt;('liOhU.n i'hiuc held at Fcnah, in tl?, ,f l.iu.cr^'k, <• d.)yh.st, byJu).n(ox, ('oro?Lr,a?,,t.?ht(-J Shelton, and tt?.d.1 b, Doctor (ir.iii. *1 on the body of Garrett Nagle, who di»d tl» < vious night from the eflecti of a bite (111111 a OIl The circumstances attending thU ca««- wi-r* T frightful and melancholy. The ,b" d wa» 1 about 20 years of age. lie was Wv.uing f repairs of a road about three weeks since. ai. J j bitten in the hand by a small dog. tr.mi Ih UDtit thursday afternoon no effects ""ro when he complained of drowsiness and li? left off woik and came home, «hen his W prepared some mulled porter for him. At th*g of the liquid he evinced some uneasim^, ami5 it was offere d him l?, became de ir oii', afterwards raging mad. The int?r?.t??"? violent paroxysms of spasm were never nwfl three or four minutes, when talktd mo,t ratl'. lie was secured and tied to a bed by two 1.1 1 (his relations and friend*, a- well as all the nciJ'P having run away from him), but he broke I If. bindings and the bedstead to piece*, andwa* own request (during one ofthe lucid inter*.ds cuffed by the police, to prevent his ,n),n; and those who wlere about him. lie contimHO most excruciatin torments for about 16 hour- nature gave way under such suffering*, and tlrf tunate being was released by death from I'* about one o clock on FntldV moinin^. Dunn;* the intervals of freedom from pain, 1", a,k"I, niilk, but requested it n.i-ht be conveyed mto through a (juill, and that he should not ?ee 1; i- ficijuently cautioned the police tokcep awa when thc. paroKym came nn, le4 he might b: He fre<juently spoke of hi> approaching deal y for the I*i icst and for his niottu-r. Ihe.'eiy > verdict—" I hat the deceased came by his del- ? the bite of a mad dog. "].iilia;rk ( hronieU. I he beautiful mansion Lnngford House, port, Salop, the seat of kl. L-q. "J: cestrcAcd hy fire on Friday nuht,
Advertising
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There is a clever article in liltiekuuod explana- tory of the duties devolving upon all true Con- servatives at the present juncture. The article sets out with the assumption of a fact which how- ever it may be questioned, cannot be denied—that every where are to be found" proofs of a general convergence towards conservative opinions," and proceeds:— It is not sufficient that it should be generally felt, that it is in the House of Commons that the battle of Ibe constitution is to he fought and won it is so in- dispensable that it should be universally understood, what is essential to success in that assembly, and bv what means the immense ascendancy which the Iii. form liill gives to the reckless, deluded, desperate, and wicked parts of the uation is to be counteracted. L'n less this can be done, the whole conservative spirit of the age will go for nothing in vain will all the aris- tocracy, all the holders of property, all the men uf vir. tue, all the men of education, be leagu. d together to resist revolution the democratic multitude, jesting on the support ofthe ten pounders, will tide roughshod over them all, and the nation will be conducted to perdition by successive acts of Parliament, having the consent of King, Lords, and Commons affixed to eVtry one of tliem. The one thing needful, therefore, is to resist the innovating party in the House uf Commons ■ and how is this to he done ? This is the vital question oil which the future fate of Euglawl entirely hinges and on which it depends, whither weare to be as heretofore the leaders of civilisation, or, after havina gone through a brief period of anarchial agony, sink irrevocably, as France has done, under the govern- ment of a corrupt and ccntralLcd despotism. iiie,? The first and most important engine to be em- ployed in this great work, is the influence of the press, and the direction of its mighty energies from the so phisms of error to the cause of truth. It is by know- ledge alone, that the wounds inflicted by knowledge; can be healed. If we look back to the remote causes which have produced the great political devolution of the nineteenth century, we shall find that they have spring from errors of thought—from those perilous delusions, which, like a pestilence, overspread the land and swept away tlie judgment of many able and good ruen, now awakened, by the Icsfln ot experience to very different sentiments. These delusions have now sunk ill society; they cease to mislead the nobility and gentry, but they unceasingly fascinate the lower or. ders of the people; their folly i. apparent to men of education or of knowledge, "but they fall with unre- sisted strength upon the inmates of alt-houses, and the frequenters of political unions. As the democratic tendency of the great majority of the public press, and of almost all that is addressed to the lower orders in great cities, has thus arisen from general causes of universal operation, so it is hevond the reach of any direct or immediate remedv. itM by slow degrees, by long and painful efforts, that the poi- son is to be expelled from tbe social body, or an anti- dote provided for its malignity. Lord Itrougham and the hdinburgli Reviewers laboured for thirty years hefore these deluSions were generally diffused it is not in a few months or years that an effect which has so gradually arisen is to be counteracted. Still the evil is not beyond the reach of a remedy. The means are provided for its extirpation by the laws of nature it sufficient virtue and resolution remain in society to afford tlic, iiiatcrials for their operation." I be writer then suggests that some part of lie funds of every conservative association should be devoted to the ablest journals and periodicals of tlie day, with a view to their diffusion, at an under price, among the persons of an inferior erade whom it is practicable to win over to safe and constitutional principles." Attention to the He gist rat ion county is especially enjoined, and the appointment ot district committees recommended Let the ?onservatn es accede at once to any mea- sures of real improvement, no matter tho? thev may trench on some exclusive privileges let hem «/M?M at once ? abuses or absurd '"?,?? ?., an.) adhere only to such as obviously 1, al hefunndanonofaU the best interests of oc?' Of hardly less importance is, the total nh«. 1" ment of that heartless, monstrous, ?S '?)'- tem in manners, by which the affeciim,- middling ranks have so long been ?ie??°'
fmperial {iarliamciu.
• i. M i «N that lie wa> pre p are d lo j u>- :1, \\11"1 d ma hl,wl'lnt.'puldtojt¡. 1 I [:' :t:;1 ¡/I I I. :III; kl:tl,Jt" I:.I: ;tI::¡I\ 1.! vs..s n',u!\ 1\) IM .I;; liu; ;i ihe It. ur,. I!¡, .i'M U :■ 't m i. e t!:c I, :icu c i't i-t uo.i H U »»r. JI \1" v lit .1 I;I uc d y in M lie v'.o-iM su!.i,ii» a I, <IO:I d III t I t it.:<MI ol I'm -c ,ir- ciiiu-ets Wil) iUciM thut M. Mc p heu s hapcl mi-tit I, :> paited. M i. (II\ 11" ,d"Irllil;\d hi, < OINJN.iint 01 breach pMU'j'A i!»m -ti tk it v^.iin-i a M«»; iiinj: I'apt r. :i, .\lulI) lp,,1 1;111 vva- iccununiUcd ?> I• J md, arid fl.. i-: il hr(,n:ht 111" I Isi.- Aii-iNn-imiiiu., in replv t<» in« jii :r v, -aiti '■■ r. ho should piocei d with the Kccle-ue-licul Court> li.il ;1"; *oo;i as 11 wa* ¡lIintt.cl. Mr. Ih Ir inquired whether there vva< to be all mm- introduced 1!ltn the Corporation* 1,ilI 1'l'I't't- iic i v cent :00;11. awt disposition* uf borough property. Liq.1 J. 1,\ \1 replied III the ailirmative. Mr. Fe Ikxlo, troved for; Coii.n.iitec oflu;IUir,\ into the tseatmcnl oj t I I i,- i in the British stt- iI (j. (;1:1.\ a-n il to it, though he thought that aing uivie could lie done thi., Session than to exa- Un tla IIHI110n of Mr. 1<1\1" a Select Committee v-.r appoillhd h! uitjuiie into the bc*t mean-* of e.vtend- ):10.: a knowledge ot tlW ar1 and tlie priuciphsof design) .,1 n' tn IllIluire IIIto the eoD«li:utton of the Koval Aca- lir!1 V, .'1'. Mr. HI KIVC-II \M move d for h ue to bring in t h ree M!U; l>t, tor tic !\r;ibli*htuent oM'ublie Walks; 'M, lor Public l.iterarv aru1 Scientific Institutions; :;d, for the Clarification of Public Houses.— ":1 VI' wt). given fur the tirst and second; a" to the third, the motion wa" withdrawn. Mr. (»ISIIOMVK then moved the re-appcintnient nf the S- h <- t Comm tteo on the f'.aroti d e l»oi h v ea>ere g ar d i^ tin* Kren«,h claims, on wiiioh a debate took place, .Iftr w hirhthe tion«e divided, when the nuiiibors were •—Mr the motion, ayain-t it, 177; majority 118 .ii. »M tho loot on. M i. W a-'is 1I\{\\111 that the petition fi om (in-at ar- re^pe-'ti,i'/ hii!-rrv at the !a*t i-lcction l;e n- fer- i> to a Se e'-t (' onnn th •, oi» w hich, a '.v-r -nii.o d:s- u -M!?, the huu d; idid, for the molion, IBû; a^a n>t .1, L'tnajorityt 54. HOI'SK or LOUIH, I.I.MSI.AV. i i; • Ktil uf i.i'iuiM.n laid upou the table the r ta: from the /)1:: .ti:('l,' moved Ifo:e;:i a former < v.-i» :i 1»\ the Duke of Kidhmond, relative to the Mibjrct of'the IU" of .f J ,027,(01). said to be uJiac- for in the revenue. 11:e repoit oftlte Loan Soneu* nill wa reeeivod ith amendments, ami I'll the 1111111011 of tIlt, Uuke uf HII iiMdsn, wa> ordered to he read a thud time to- laonow (this da\ J. lioi Si; OF COMMONS, WIMMM.AY. '|„-IV beim: «•v ;.ti Membi-r- 1III'>lIt at four o'elork, and ';1/ ¡, fl';lnirl,l to 1IIUC a the S*• i AKi- n deehui I the hou-eto stand adjourne«l till to. IIIt,rr..w. he speaker takes the chair at twelve o'l look. HOI Si: or l.OlvDS, Jim-IMv,.hiv !(5, H>M \I;OV < litI.r \\11)-1)/ JîIl(¡U(;. I The i i-l».>p of I,\III, in presenting a petition on t!»„ >nlj«et ol the lri>h e>lncation con.miv>icn iii'iuii( <1 Lie Idter which had lately appeared in the public journals, addres-ed to the noble viscount at the head tll tac ^oveiimieni, and purplrtJIIg 10 he folU Hr. \Iurny, the Catholic Archbishop of J)ubIll1, Wrc guani ne ? i<eouut Mn.upi'ivNr. a[>peared to answer in the alHrmative. The Bi:lwp of K\i i km then defended himself frolll tiLl: imj)utativ>ns ca4 upon him Itl the charge ùf having eii-leavoured to WillIe llac character of Dr. ]{muan Catholic Ar<-hitishop of I'ubliu, ill iik/vino tOI I hc production ot 111' lettir aildressCil hy that ill- dividual tll the noble viscount. Tilt, ng'ht n'v prvlatc pioi-eedel to read, extrarts 1'10111 th Idler of Dr. !HlJrray, awl contended llat Ilc wtH not.a fit person to Illdol oJlvc as it commissioner of education under Iii" government, Ilt held ill his h:lwllhe woi k to sv hi= h o much allu-ion h »d IWi.:1I made (" Dens' I heolo^y,") awl which appeared to come forth tinder the sanctiou and authoiity of Dr. Murray, and in Ili (tilc Hishop of opinion, it contained matter not fit tor ie cars ol the Protectants «» f that kingdom. Ir. land was ill 4:ir«;to bed ::¡ :¡:i iloman Catholic con at ies Oil Ih'M ontiuent ft»r its adherence to doetriues which were k n; since obsolete, lie rHÙ only t'v h r in pl1Juf "f Lt. to the oifiee, still instil; d in th 11i-h Koaitiii Catholic IWeviary, in l.oaour of! lildebrand, !,y whom the Ivnpcor Francis IV. was depO'ed, and his u:Iil'd; aN dvi d I'loin tl.eir allegiance. This Pope Jlihhbraiid v.a- a complete iireliiaud, and the most r h ant,;b L tl. i. t!. cou d be said of him was, that i: ,1\ll; a rein ;o ( i ^'t. ac. The oliice 111 honour of him, although i "p\y\1 by older ufall tl.ocontinetital thdl, Catholic tJ\HH their Iwok,, (If praTr. wa.s "II continued and olfeied \ipby the hi"h Priv>t-?. Theie were many iie;taaee> ct ihii -ort, to which he w(>'i!.lha\e no diihcultv in nf.riing. With respcct1 tn tilt: right IIf temporal States to cumpel their sub- jceU Iu a bipt wha level religious opinions tilty pltal:tl. as ,11" to bv Doctor Murray 111 h" letter, he re- greticd tv Ia: uhrgui to say that Do( tor Murray had; >talct! what he knew to ùe false. The assertion of him fll' bishop 01 Kxeter,) \1" coidirmed inthe statement in" Dins" woilv,, to which he had previously rc. fd:1. rile right rev. prelate then presented a pcli- tion from a clergyman who h.id formerly resided in lrel.ia-1, but bad been obliged 10 fly to Kngland in coiisi- pK-nce (If the persecutions to n hi di 11: liadbecn cxpon'd. lie begued to say, with respect to a petition which he had formerly presented fnllll the Hcv. Mr. Nannie, of \ehil, that the peiseeution to which tilt: (hi Id ten w ho illh:lld,,(1 the rev. gentleman's school s had betUe\posid, had eiitin lv ceased. Ye-count MM ISOI T<SI said that a discussion like the preH tit, 111111 carried 011 ill the tone whil.1t the right rev. prelate 1iIII thought ht tu assume, could lead to no- thing but evit> inent. With respect tu Dr. J1Hrrav. be jM-ount Melbourne) h;ullw hesitation in saving thai he had heard \1flwthillg w hich rendered lh.it Ïf d:vidu il unlit to be a commissioner of national educa- tion. We ought now to forvi-t ancient feu d s. \<i doubt it had been >aid that ( itholics inculcated doc- trines for exterminating heretics; hut it ought to I", remembered, «%o also, were such doctrines to lIP as fairly 4 aurihukd to Protestants ill past times. James the Kiist conliscatiu tht: property u, the inhabitants of the province tlf Cl.sU-r, ln1 put 1111'111 to the wl1ft1; and ihe :\Lullui If M.illoid would have done thr same,as 1t'lr.h-,lliH: III opte Ilf had he Iwl been called tll lingland I,) (1,lllbl"t hmne he would thell place tlio.e j i« i., of ¡¡i.toIY in opposition 10 all th It nb Im Ifu. d III the book ot Peter Dens, Pru- k'1 "f r ieo o. in the I i;iw :>ities of l,lI1lr"in,- {/(, .Of/ ,i lull J1!. I M jJ.piis lJ \\) r1t ILl con'cnih d tint 1)0 pcr- '( >: c I aios. » V- put ot the Protestants; the' w.0 ';1' 111 d 1 'V the condm t If Catholic pi t and tIK-II 10,11- i The Duke of Wi i is<.i> said that the t'ro1"t;¡nt pepie of l.nglaicl .is w,l| as thos(> of Ireland, h.id .ocat iv.i on to c». p la.:i of w.i'i t of protect on on the | • 111 rt tie ( (1¡,,¡\, (iod knew he wou d r.i tin r do .i u i.ii. a mi go any length than en- :I; (I:I: 11 "l II "in :I! CII1: \\I lt"IIII:1 :I:I:'I'" Hut the truth is, Id the Protot nts of the ('U;llItn have 1:(' same ph tldi\lu aibudvd tn them (1" was itlf,h,,1 to "tlur elas.( •. uf his Maje ty's subjeit-. and the if b'e \is.ou:it at the head of tin government might v 1.■<. ,» s tui 1'\ 11jn4luJlhill lieland. ( Hr<tr. ) { lit- -tddsfiop •. f ( j I ¡¡ t:r n\ was tlf opinion that hi, 11 11 1 .d (tin- Ihsiiop of 1-.xetei ) had 11111 tu'cn t illv de*ilt IliI hv the JloLh. viscount .It the bead "f the government. hen III' .itW such atro- cities piaciised wiien he head lvomi>h privsi> «h aoume Pi-'t'.staiits from the pulpit, merely for po- litical olbnces, he eoul-l 110t believe but tiiat till: Ca- tholic eh uy «i :c tliid1\ t Id ime. The I,Ht\"ll!itlli td I'r..t. -tants at 1'n"l!lt ill liel.md u s, nLbl, d 11 n-ijcli tin's practi ni by tiie Pagans upon the larh Chi isiiafis, v\ fnc.h uet'e 1101 s(» inm h IIY the ptII:¡"I'1 as 11 v l1 ie IIII};U\ iu<e oft" state. II, ap"IIt1:inlltll >\ hit Iii' h !d said, hnt would be glad u heic it 10 ht 11111.1 when It would ht, most useful. nil l-.aii of 11'lllnn. and othei noble lords took p. |i ( to t!u d! sC! *s :< 111. I he oel-tion w as then laid eu tiie tahh and the tl 'II « ljnUI.K,I. HO! >II OL COMMONS, TTITIM O. I Oa the on11;'i • Mi. lo .? ? cu.cm tkc was I a "1 to pinVid ? ,'I: 'I:" 1: 'fl; III' I:!J L. I ?; I-od H i:: moving that 'IC house do ^■)! e tr .elf mio a < cittee on the Al ?.,i, ii?;, I ( l i' I'll!, d I' stood to MV that lie 1,?l no' p I ??ll clausi-s on the bioi-ing "?, "I ■ ■ .1 j. J ;t- ;■ p; I tl:at other I i nd i \111,: oj t i' 11 11 1, It aiding them to move whatever clauses they might think -lIl:('I:S.,¡try before the report that he proposed ?J¡l: iccommittiil ot the bill. As he had taken that course, 10" hoped they would "lIuw the report to be Iweilcd \\ltll\l1\t iipposition. he hou-e having resolved into a committee. (Ill the IOth clause being proposed, Mr. I'M v» o ro.se to move, 111 the shape of all ameud- !III lit to this clause, the proportion which he Ílad originally intended to move as all 11l,trtl1'tioll to tltl: (oii.miUee, before the biil was committed. I lit; bon. IHUt11:cr then proceeded to contended that tlitH; was 110 reason fur thU wholesale disfranchisement of the freemen, and ill proof of his argtll11cnt ipioted several extracts fwm the report of the cOlUmittee 011 the taf ford election, to >hovv that £ 10. householders of Staf- > ford "cre as open to bribery a:; the burgesses. He all) read the ev idence of au inhabitant of Stafford, relative to tllc trJII..actioll.; at Sir .1. Campbell's elec- )iu? h.ith.tt?).Kt;t'ut(.tM(it()tcrs," said that gentleman, who voted for Sir John Campbell, 1 ?y«)t).:ud 53)." (?.M<<rt«???f,AMr.) After «uch a statement it was a mockery to say that those who were electors on the CIO. franchise were in any Fi-spec* supei ior to th po¡}r freemen. He concluded by moving the following amendment:—" Provided always atuibe it l'uactcdlhat evtry borough, whether th Millie be a county of itself or lIot, where the right to vote in the election of 1IIclIIlJer or a member to serve in parliament for ueh boro\1h i according to the laws now in foree, enjoyed by per5(ln.. cntitled to vote in virtue of some corporate right, nothing what- soever in this act contained shall ill ;U1\je hinder or prevent any person or persons who novy enjov, or who hereafter uecording to the laws now in forr might have acquired, bitch corporate right, from enjoying or c:li'1l::i¿':rporatc right for the purpose of votiii,( n such elect on. Lord J. Ri sstu. said the hon. member for Worces-! ter had asked for the reason why they interfered with the freemen in regard to their parliamentary franchise. lie (Lord J. Hussell) denied that they had done so thev had merely altered the mode of regulation. The noble l-ord here referred, to the several propositions that had been made for the purpose of adjusting the con- stituency ,and n pealed his former objections to their bein." adopted and then he came to the present amend- men? which he designated as anomalous, their having declared a body of J' eti as being not fit to remain members of the corporation and then upon the right of that freedom of which they were to be deprived, to preserve for them their right to vote at elcctions for members of parliament. ( Hear.) lie had consented 10 retain those rights in the Kefurm Pill, but he did I not see how they could now consent to the amendment, which had for its tendency the purpose of adding an entfielv new constituency. Sir R. I'UL rose amidst great cheering from the op- position benches. The noble lord told the house that this clause did not alter the Reform Act. That it had nothing to do with the election of Meml>ersx)f Parlia- ?::t,,t, and therefore be z,,g??d the question drily on its merits. Now he (Sit-R. Peel) must say that the noble lord had not arguid the case drily, but had been guilty of great sophistry. (Hear hear from th, opposition touches.) nnschnise?ent to alter the Reform Act. lie did not COlli plain of an altcration being made in that measure, but then it ought to be done by a di tinet and .separate motion, not by a side wind. (Hear.) When tho Reform Bill passed into a law, the House ;lf —the House of Commolls-the whole cOllntry were under the impression that the rights of freemen were pH;lrHd under tbat second charter of the con- stitution. (Hear.) What was the cry—what the watch-word at the time (,f Was it not every where posted up—" the Bill, the whole ?it),and no- thing but the Bill V (Hear.) Now he (Sir R. Peel) I"o I)i t that time that alterations would be made, and that they were most likely to come from the authors the bill. The Reform BiH was a deli- herate measure, as he before said. The country SUI" posed it to be a final and delinite mca-lIIe as rq;anbl the rilit; of freemen, and those children burn previous to the passing of the act. There was no gpccitie ground showlI for depriving the freemen of their rights nei- ther could it be justified as a general principle. (Hear, hear.) '1 hey had long enjoyed their rights by pre- scription. He aNo thought the right ohlained by seven vear>'apprenticeship ought to be held as sacred as three years' rl"idenœ. The noble lord appeared him- self to doubt whether the £10. franchise was exactly a proper one. It was upon the grounds he ha.1 stated that he should give his support to the OI11Cndlllent.- (VJivi r, fmtr.) Looking at the Hefornl Hill a, a finul and permanent measure, he should give his vote for the protection of all existing rights of freemen. (lIear.) I he hou-e then divided, when there appeared- Tor Mr. Praed's amendment 234  it 12(;4 Majority for ministers 211 I iVIr. POVSOMIY then moved a clause to the effect, that in any city or borough whieh had the right of returning members to parliament before the Lt day of June, UJ35, any person should hare an inchoate right to vote ill nght ot 111 Imth, or, Itv having en- tered into any iudetituics ol apprenticeship, should have the sallie nht and privileges prbl'1'c\110 him a before the passing of this act. This was opposed by Lord J. Rt ^i.i j., and aft, a speech frulu Mr. AOI.IONUY, was defeated uy a ma" jority uf 31. Some other divis( ions took place, and the chairman reported progress. fit answer to a question from Ilr. Hume. Lord J. Ri ssi:i.i. expreessed a hope that the house would sit on Saturday, and that the bill would be read a thiid time on Monday.—Adj. PA U LI A M EN T A R V SCMMARY. In the Loans 011 Friday uigllt it was stated hv Lord Melbourne tlJat the Report of tlH Scotch Edu- cation Commissioners, respecting the Cniversify of lilas¡.;ow, uud the subject of the union oft}¡" Cniver- sities, were under consideration. '1 ho Marquis of Lansdow neand the Lords Brougham and barnelirie respectively stated the groullds on whicb tlwv were against udllllttm ladies to th, Parliamentary ])0- bates. On the presentation of pellt\UH against any Lord Auckland said that was no alteration intended to he made this session. Petitions were presented :\gamt the appropriation" clause in the Insh lithe ;??.u?dtheArch?sfH.pot(';th!t.,hm;t;? "uti? of a motion (0 protect the Revenues of Benefices.— nIP Marquis of W esUneath moved for a rpturn of tll" number of persons committed in Ireland forcrime, frum dune. 1H;H. to .Iul\1H3:), distinguishing them illto Protestants or ulller Dissenters, and Homan Catholics. The sense of'the House Inning been un equivocally declared agalll::it a proposition unani- mously described as absurd, impracticable, and invi- dious, it was, of necessity, withdrawn bv the Noble Mover. Sotue Bills were then advanced a :it¡Le,aud tht House adjourned at seven o 'clock. in the ( OMVIOS.S Mr. Lees, .M.P for OJdhamJ took the O iths aud hi:> l'at. Some discussion ensued on dH presentation of a petition trOIll the Rev. Mr. hipre, complaining or alh-sations contained ill a po (ihon betore to the House respecting the Berhampstcad public school, Mr. W ard expressed it conviction to the ell', ct that the abuses in question did exi.st. and that a general measure, for the better .uliu in ist r.it ii oi uf fuuds left to graulJuar schools, hou1J he 1JLtruduced. A petition was patented from medical men. practising in Berkshire, complaining I hat tho rate ol remuneration, fixed by the Poor Law Commissioners, was not hiidi enonirh. Mr. S. Lt*- fevre sai d that the Oouim s.-ionor.s hud nothing to do I ;'¡'i:' tl¡I(:II;I'I::1 'I; I/I: :I!illI;11111tf11\In I IX with the guardians of the ponr; tin* Poor Law Com- lIIi:-i:-i10IH:rs only stipulated for tlw employment of qualltied pral'llt,u\'rs.11'. Wallace presented twu petitions lIaillst the faxes on Knowledge, one signed bv the Magistrates, Town Council, and other respect- aitle lulmhltauts ut th tow nofGreeiiock, to the II U 111- ber (If 1 ,tkj. the other to the same etlect by 704 of the worhill classes. A petition (the precursor of un Address tn his Majesty was presented from Mayo, 011 tho subject 01 distress JHilYIll¡ tur the immediate aid tlf the Government. Mr. Hume gave notice of a motion tm the subject of the Orange outrages re- tenth committed "t Belfast, whereonnyoung woman had 1;"l'U killed, aud several persons severely wound- ed. The Hon. Member said that a person of rank was implicated in this disgraceful 1trray. lhe house went into Committee on the Municipal Reform 1hll, and after all tlu' dau:it>:i rClllaill1n JIII(I been tÎually considered, the Report was received, and the third reaoiug fixed for Monday. The Committee com- niciii E,| ith the ,V.M clause. On the»>?th and on son-.e other* there was considerable dîscussion.Sml